a comprehensive review of strategic entrepreneurship

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University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository Graduate Studies The Vault: Electronic Theses and Dissertations 2014-09-23 A Comprehensive Review of Strategic Entrepreneurship Research: Integration and Implications for Organizational Studies Abousalem, Nadine Abousalem, N. (2014). A Comprehensive Review of Strategic Entrepreneurship Research: Integration and Implications for Organizational Studies (Unpublished master's thesis). University of Calgary, Calgary, AB. doi:10.11575/PRISM/24674 http://hdl.handle.net/11023/1784 master thesis University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission. Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca

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Page 1: A Comprehensive Review of Strategic Entrepreneurship

University of Calgary

PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository

Graduate Studies The Vault: Electronic Theses and Dissertations

2014-09-23

A Comprehensive Review of Strategic

Entrepreneurship Research: Integration and

Implications for Organizational Studies

Abousalem, Nadine

Abousalem, N. (2014). A Comprehensive Review of Strategic Entrepreneurship Research:

Integration and Implications for Organizational Studies (Unpublished master's thesis). University

of Calgary, Calgary, AB. doi:10.11575/PRISM/24674

http://hdl.handle.net/11023/1784

master thesis

University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their

thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through

licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under

copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission.

Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca

Page 2: A Comprehensive Review of Strategic Entrepreneurship

UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY

A Comprehensive Review of Strategic Entrepreneurship Research:

Integration and Implications for Organizational Studies

by

NADINE ABOUSALEM

A THESIS

SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES

IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE

DEGREE OF MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

HASKAYNE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS

CALGARY, ALBERTA

SEPTEMBER, 2014

© NADINE ABOUSALEM 2014

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ii

ABSTRACT

While the origins of strategic entrepreneurship (SE) can be clearly traced and defined,

the current conceptualizations of the construct its boundaries are far less clear. There is

still much confusion about SE, and many potential gaps exist in the field. It becomes

less clear whether SE is a subfield within the entrepreneurship discipline, a subset of

strategic management or of corporate entrepreneurship, or an entirely separate domain

that simultaneously or sequentially straddles entrepreneurship and strategy.

The primary contributions of this research are the definition of strategic

entrepreneurship’s boundaries and the identification of the five critical dimensions of

strategic entrepreneurship:

1. The balance between exploration (i.e. opportunity-seeking behaviors) and

exploitation (i.e. advantage-seeking behaviors), where the former emerges from

entrepreneurship and the latter emerges from strategy

2. Value creation

3. Balancing short-term success with a long-term perspective

4. The continuous nature of strategically entrepreneurial activity

5. Innovation

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would like to thank my supervisors, Dr. Jim Dewald and Dr. Olga Petricevic, for their

guidance, support, and feedback. You are both great teachers.

I would also like to thank my parents for supporting me throughout this long (and

sometimes difficult) writing process. Your advice has always kept me grounded and

focused.

I would also like to give a special thanks to Sandra Malach. I fell in love with

entrepreneurship after taking your ENTI 381 class in my sophomore year, and it was our

meeting a year and a half ago that gave me the final push to pursue graduate studies.

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DEDICATION

To Badr

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Abstract .................................................................................................................. ii  

Acknowledgements ............................................................................................... iii  

Dedication ............................................................................................................. iv  

Table of Contents .................................................................................................. v  

List of Tables ......................................................................................................... ix  

List of Figures and Illustrations .............................................................................. x  

List of Symbols, Abbreviations and Nomenclature ................................................ xi  

Epigraph ............................................................................................................... xii  

INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................... 1  

RESEARCH QUESTIONS AND PROBLEM DEFINITION .................................... 4  

INTRODUCTION TO STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP ................................ 5  

The Importance of Strategic Entrepreneurship .................................................. 8  

METHODS .......................................................................................................... 11  

Sampling Procedures ...................................................................................... 11  

Literature Search Results ................................................................................ 15  

GENERAL DISCUSSION .................................................................................... 19  

The Origins and History of Strategic Entrepreneurship ................................... 19  

The Genesis of the Strategic Entrepreneurship Field ................................. 24  

Key Points ............................................................................................. 26  

THE FIELD OF STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP ........................................ 27  

Integration of Strategy and Entrepreneurship .................................................. 30  

Key Points ............................................................................................. 33  

THE FOUR QUESTIONS .................................................................................... 34  

Boundaries of Strategic Entrepreneurship ....................................................... 34  

As a Separate Field of Study ...................................................................... 35  

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As a Construct ............................................................................................ 39  

Components of Strategic Entrepreneurship ................................................ 42  

Innovation in Strategic Entrepreneurship .............................................. 50  

Value Creation in Strategic Entrepreneurship ....................................... 54  

Levels of Analysis ....................................................................................... 61  

What All This Means ................................................................................... 65  

Key Points ............................................................................................. 66  

Brief Overview of Current Research ................................................................ 68  

Themes in Extant Literature ............................................................................ 78  

Value Creation ............................................................................................ 78  

Exploration and Exploitation ....................................................................... 78  

Middle Managers ........................................................................................ 79  

Innovation ................................................................................................... 81  

Knowledge Spillover ................................................................................... 81  

Family Firms ............................................................................................... 82  

Overview and Analysis of Conceptual Frameworks ........................................ 83  

Early Conceptualizations and Descriptions ................................................ 85  

More Complex Conceptual Frameworks ..................................................... 88  

Later Conceptualizations and Descriptions ................................................. 91  

Key Points ............................................................................................. 99  

Other Frameworks ......................................................................................... 100  

Knowledge Spillover View of Strategic Entrepreneurship (KSSE) ............ 101  

Strategic Entrepreneurship in Family Firms .............................................. 102  

Key Points ........................................................................................... 105  

Strategic Entrepreneurship’s Limited Empirical History ................................. 106  

Empirically-Tested Frameworks and Results ........................................... 106  

The Need for an Accepted Measure of Strategic Entrepreneurship .............. 112  

Qualitative Studies .................................................................................... 113  

Entrepreneurial Orientation (EO) .............................................................. 114  

Stevenson’s Model of Entrepreneurial Management ................................ 116  

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Innovation ................................................................................................. 117  

Key Points ........................................................................................... 118  

Successful Implementation of Strategic Entrepreneurship ............................ 119  

Key Points ........................................................................................... 125  

Challenges of Strategic Entrepreneurship ..................................................... 126  

Key Points ........................................................................................... 135  

THE FIVE DIMENSIONS OF STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP ................ 137  

Content Analysis and Coding Method ........................................................... 140  

The Dimensions ............................................................................................. 141  

Other Results ............................................................................................ 147  

Key Points ........................................................................................... 150  

WHERE DOES STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP FIT? ............................. 152  

Key Points ........................................................................................... 155  

Findings ......................................................................................................... 155  

Recommendations ......................................................................................... 162  

FUTURE RESEARCH DIRECTIONS ................................................................ 165  

DISCUSSION AND IMPLICATIONS ................................................................. 177  

Implications for Scholars ............................................................................... 177  

Implications for Managers ............................................................................. 182  

Short Example: Apple Incorporated .......................................................... 184  

Concluding Thoughts ..................................................................................... 187  

REFERENCES .................................................................................................. 189  

APPENDIX A: LIST OF STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP ARTICLES FROM

LITERATURE SEARCH PUBLISHED FROM 2001 TO 2014 ................... 210  

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APPENDIX B: LIST OF DEFINITIONS AND DESCRIPTIONS OF STRATEGIC

ENTREPRENEURSHIP USED IN ACADEMIC PAPERS FROM 2001 TO 2014

.................................................................................................................. 219  

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LIST OF TABLES

Table 1. Selected Definitions and Descriptions of Strategic Entrepreneurship ............ 139  

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LIST OF FIGURES AND ILLUSTRATIONS

Figure 1. Breakdown of Analyzed Papers by Journal .................................................... 16  

Figure 2. Breakdown of Analyzed Papers by Field ........................................................ 17  

Figure 3. Frequency of Strategic Entrepreneurship Publications from 2001-2014 ......... 18  

Figure 4. Where Strategic Entrepreneurship Fits ......................................................... 153  

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LIST OF SYMBOLS, ABBREVIATIONS AND NOMENCLATURE

Acronym Definition

AMJ Academy of Management Journal

CE Corporate entrepreneurship

ET&P Entrepreneurship Theory & Practice

EO Entrepreneurial orientation

IJTM International Journal of Technology Management

JIBS Journal of International Business Studies

JOM Journal of Management

KSSE Knowledge spillover view of strategic entrepreneurship

RBV Resource-based view

SE Strategic entrepreneurship

SEJ Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal

SMS Strategic Management Society

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EPIGRAPH

“Every advantage is temporary.”

Katerina Stoykova Klemer

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INTRODUCTION

While the origins of strategic entrepreneurship (SE) construct can be clearly traced and

defined, the current frameworks for the construct and the construct’s boundaries (in

terms of its contributions to domains of strategy and entrepreneurship respectively) are

far less clear. There is still much confusion about SE and many potential gaps exist in

terms of its conceptualization (Schindehutte and Morris, 2009), which ultimately makes

its implications to organizational studies less understood. It becomes less clear whether

SE is a subfield within the entrepreneurship discipline, a subset of strategic

management or of corporate entrepreneurship, or an entirely separate domain that

simultaneously or sequentially straddles entrepreneurship and strategy (Schindehutte

and Morris, 2009). In fact, some go as far as to suggest that SE represents a benign

takeover of entrepreneurship by strategic management (Baker and Pollock, 2007;

Meyer, 2009). Strategic entrepreneurship, therefore, suffers many of the same

problems as strategic management and entrepreneurship before it, in that it is

characterized by a lack of construct legitimacy and undefined theoretical content and

boundaries as a field of study.

For the field of strategic entrepreneurship to become established and further developed,

and to identify the current research gaps and how they can be filled, the boundaries of

the field need to be defined in relation to similar constructs (such as corporate

entrepreneurship). Boundary definition requires identification and establishment of a

conceptual framework for SE, as there have been several attempts to change and

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refine the initial seminal framework proposed by Ireland, et al. (2003) (i.e. Ireland and

Webb, 2007; Agarwal, et al., 2007; Agarwal, et al., 2010; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010;

Hitt, et al., 2011; Kraus, et al., 2011; Lumpkin, et al., 2011).

Many differing descriptions and opinions exist among scholars as to the nature of

strategic entrepreneurship and what constitutes SE activity. Kuratko and Audretsch,

(2009), for example, highlighted many of these differing perspectives on this emerging

concept by interviewing different management scholars. To answer the first question

and reconcile some of these perspectives, a definitional analysis has been conducted to

assess different scholars’ definitions and descriptions of strategic entrepreneurship and

the common themes emerging from those different definitions. Next, a comprehensive

literature search and review aims to help answer the latter three questions by

determining the boundaries of the strategic entrepreneurship construct and field and

providing an overview of how conceptual frameworks of strategic entrepreneurship have

emerged and evolved over the construct’s short history.

The primary contribution of this research is the identification of the five critical

dimensions of strategic entrepreneurship through a definitional content analysis. The

secondary contribution of this research is the integration all current knowledge of SE

into a comprehensive analysis. An overview of all conceptual frameworks in the field

thus far is given. A discussion on themes within the extant body of SE literature is also

included. Previous papers with a similar intent do not provide as a comprehensive

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review of the field. The tertiary contribution of this research is to highlight the research

gaps within the field, including the need for more empirically-driven papers in this field.

Lastly, implications of the results for both academics and practitioners are discussed.

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RESEARCH QUESTIONS AND PROBLEM DEFINITION

Foss and Lyngsie (2011) indicate that, “strategic entrepreneurship is still mainly a rather

loose amalgam of a number of insights from strategy and entrepreneurship,” confirming

the need for some clarity in this emerging field.

To determine the contributions and implications of SE in the organizational studies

domain, the following research questions need to be and will be answered in this

research:

1. What are the definitional boundaries of strategic entrepreneurship?

2. Where does strategic entrepreneurship fit in the domains of strategy and

entrepreneurship?

3. What does strategic entrepreneurship contribute to either of these domains?

4. Where is the field of strategic entrepreneurship now, and what does it need to

further develop?

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INTRODUCTION TO STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP

Entrepreneurial orientation and activity within large firms has been the subject of

academic literature for the past few decades. Corporate entrepreneurship (CE), for

example, as coined by Peter F. Drucker, occurs as a result of a firm’s entrepreneurial

orientation (i.e. pursuing growth or creating values through new ventures within a firm’s

organizational framework). Strategic Entrepreneurship (SE), a term coined by Ireland,

et. al. (2003), is a concept developed from the suggestion of an intersection between

strategic management and entrepreneurship, and building on contributions by

(Burgelman, 1983; Zahra, 1991; Covin and Miles, 1999). The SE domain is still in its

formative years (Ireland, 2007), and while scholars have spent time trying to define SE,

little attention has been given to identify the boundaries of SE and its distinctive place in

the fields of entrepreneurship and strategy respectively, especially in relation to other

constructs like corporate entrepreneurship. The need for conceptual clarity still exists,

even with the efforts of several scholars to shed light on the exact nature of strategic

entrepreneurship (Meyer, 2009; Kuratko and Audretsch, 2009; Schindehutte and

Morris, 2009; Hitt, et al., 2011; Kraus, et al, 2011; Van Rensburg, 2013).

Schindehutte and Morris (2009) described the need to answer the question of whether

SE is a “framework, model, theory, paradigm, concept or a simple point of interface;” by

concluding that strategic entrepreneurship is not “strategy that is entrepreneurial” or

“entrepreneurship that is strategic” or “entrepreneurship plus strategy.” None of these

phrases encompass the fundamental integration or intersection between

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entrepreneurship and strategic management that Ireland, et al (2003) described in their

seminal paper on the topic. Schindeutte and Morris (2009) warn that SE is not a binary

construct and should be viewed as something beyond simple interfaces or

combinations of strategy and entrepreneurship.

In fact, the “inherently paradoxical” tensions in SE do not interact with each other as a

series of oppositions and differences such as exploration and exploitation—they are

also interdependent and complement each other in a movement between order and

chaos (Schindehutte and Morris, 2009). In support of this notion, Kyrgidou and Hughes

(2010) present an iterative model of strategic entrepreneurship as an improvement over

the linear model presented by Ireland, et al. (2003). The iterative model better

represents the constant tension between opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking

behaviors and the need for firms to constantly balance the two behaviors for effective

SE (Ireland and Webb, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Siren, et al., 2011). In other

words, firms effectively using SE will not necessarily engage, for example, in exploration

activities exclusively at one point in time, and then engage in exploitation activities.

Rather, firms must engage in both types of activities. As Schindehutte and Morris

(2009) put it, SE “does not imply a compromise, integration, or balance of bipolar

tensions, but the simultaneous existence of two inconsistent states“. Additionally, the

iterative framework better captures the complexity of the strategic entrepreneurship

process, in that it is not a simple process within a firm. Furthermore, achieving the

complex balance between exploration and exploitation consists of more than merely

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allocating resources evenly between the two processes; rather, each is a wholly distinct

and different process and transitioning between the two can prove to be challenging to

firms (Ireland and Webb, 2007). In fact, some organizational observers have noticed

that exploitation tends to drive out exploration (Ireland and Webb, 2007), making

achieving such a balance extremely difficult. However, more work has to be done on

studying this complex balance within an SE complex.

The fundamental question in the newly formed SE field is how firms create value. In

other words, how should firms combine entrepreneurial action that creates new

opportunities with strategic action that generates competitive advantage (Agarwal, et

al., 2007). Scholars have already attempted to answer this question in various ways,

building a strong theoretical base for the construct that has yet to be supported by a

strong empirical foundation (although two empirical studies exist to date that test SE in

a practical setting). For example, some papers have been written about the exploration

and exploitation balance inherent to SE as the key to value creation (Ireland and Webb,

2009). Other papers connect SE to knowledge spillovers, based on a creative

construction approach put forward by Agarwal, et al. (2007) that identifies knowledge

spillovers as a key mechanism underlying new venture formation and development at a

micro level, as well as economic growth at a macro level (this is what is known as the

knowledge spillover view of strategic entrepreneurship (KSSE)). However, these

attempts have not been able to offer a solid empirical test of how firms actually identify

and combine entrepreneurial action with strategic action that generates competitive

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advantage (Agarwal, et al., 2007; Schindehutte and Morris, 2009; Foss and Lyngsie,

2011). The strategic management field is still trying to resolve conceptual and empirical

complexities of defining and measuring competitive advantage of firms (Durand, 2002;

Tang and Liou, 2010) while the entrepreneurship field still debates whether

entrepreneurial opportunities are created or recognized (Alvarez and Barney, 2007).

Nevertheless, these debates and conversations are particularly common when a field is

in its infancy stages (as SE is) and without a clear research paradigm (Ireland, 2007).

The field requires additional scholarly attention and identification of its contributions.

The establishment of a new journal on strategic entrepreneurship (namely the Strategic

Entrepreneurship Journal (SEJ)) tried to do just that. The scholarly articles appearing in

SEJ seeking to engage in the development and establishment of SE are increasing

numbers (Mathews, 2010) and impact. However, an increasing number of scholarly

contributions is facilitating the continuing development of an emerging research

paradigm (Ireland, 2007).

The Importance of Strategic Entrepreneurship

As firms continue to operate in increasingly dynamic, complex, and global competitive

environments, the issue of uncertainty about future market conditions is becoming

increasingly important (especially in fast moving industries such as high technology).

Many industries across the world have experienced and will experience severe

exogenous shocks that can change how firms do business (or even cause firms to fail).

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Examples of these include the Great Recession of 2008 that affected American

businesses as well as other firms and economies globally and various technological

revolutions such as the emergence of the World Wide Web (and subsequent dotcom

boom and bust) and the smartphone revolution (which took down Blackberry).

Strategic entrepreneurship can be a tool to help firms mitigate the problems associated

with uncertainty (Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009; Kyrgidou and

Hughes, 2010) and better prepare firms for future exogenous shocks, like the ones

listed above. After all, firms have no control over their external environment; however,

SE literature posits that firms who successfully balance exploration and exploitation

activities are better prepared to deal with changes in the external environment.

Engaging in strategic entrepreneurship enhances organizational decision makers’

awareness of the uncertainty associated with their firms’ efforts to be competitively

successful, while simultaneously continuing to rely on the firm’s current competitive

advantages as the foundation for future success (Ireland and Webb, 2009; Kyrgidou

and Hughes, 2010). To battle uncertainty, decision makers must maintain their firm’s

proactive focus on opportunity-seeking behavior (behavior through which potential

opportunities are identified as sources of future competitive success for the firm) while

concentrating on advantage-seeking behavior (behavior where current competitive

advantages are exploited and opportunities for future advantages are strategically

pursued).

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Therefore, the strategic entrepreneurship field is a very timely and relevant field in

management studies. The field combines perspectives from entrepreneurship and

strategy not only to answer the question of how firms create wealth or value, but also

how firms can enjoy long-term success in an uncertain and dynamic business

environment.

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METHODS

To provide a comprehensive literature review on the field of strategic entrepreneurship,

47 scholarly (peer-reviewed) papers were analyzed that were published between 2001

and 2014, inclusive. The year 2001 was chosen because it corresponds to the year

when Hitt, et al. (2001) first published the seminal article on strategic entrepreneurship

and established the concept’s significance in the literature.

This literature search will provide the basis discussions on definitions and descriptions

of SE, definition of boundaries of the construct, the evolution of the conceptualization of

SE, and the identification of gaps and future research directions for the field included

herein. The following describes the methods followed to analyze these papers.

Sampling Procedures

A series of keyword searches were conducted in two databases: (1) ProQuest’s

ABI/INFORM – Complete (Business) database and (2) EBSCO’s Business Source

Complete. These databases were chosen as they focus exclusively on articles

pertaining to business and management studies.

This approach is established in the studies conducting similar searches about

entrepreneurship concepts (e.g. Busenitz et al., 2003; Grégoire et al., 2011). The

primary reason for choosing two widely available databases including a broad array of

journals was to increases the external validity of the final sample of articles that will be

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analyzed in this research. This is a more reliable and a more efficient way of searching

compared to a manual search through an arbitrary list of target journals.

The goal was to build an exhaustive list of literature that has the phrase “strategic

entrepreneurship” in either the title or the abstract of the paper (or both). This search

returned 51 papers.

A check was made to ensure that all the papers meeting the first criteria were indeed

discussing the strategic entrepreneurship concept, as first outlined by Ireland, et al

(2003), rather than simply using the phrase without actually referring to the construct. I

made this check by ensuring that at least one core SE paper1 was cited in the reference

section of these papers (usually Ireland, et al., 2003).

Also, some papers that used the phrase “strategic entrepreneur” or “strategic

entrepreneurs” were omitted – these papers are not referring to the SE construct, but

rather, refer to entrepreneurs acting strategically (as a descriptor). Others using the

phrase “strategic entrepreneur” were included in the list, as they did refer to the correct

concept.

One paper using the phrase “strategic entrepreneurial” (Shulman, et al., 2011) was also

omitted from analysis as it does not cite Ireland, et al. (2003) and does not refer to the

1 A core strategic entrepreneurship paper is that which describes or refines a conceptual framework for strategic entrepreneurship. Ireland, et al. (2003) and Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) are two examples.

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construct in question. Another paper using the phrase “strategic entrepreneurial”

(Sharma, 2011) is simply an introductory article for an issue of a journal that focuses on

strategic behavior in a family business context, but does not discuss the SE construct.

Dhliwayo (2014) was omitted because the paper introduces and discusses a model for

a different construct (entrepreneurial competitive strategy) albeit using “strategic

entrepreneurship” in its abstract. Also, papers using the phrase “strategic

entrepreneurship” without referring to the SE construct (i.e., Zvirblis and Buracas, 2011)

were omitted from analysis. Also, Messeghem (2003) was omitted from analysis as it

uses “strategic entrepreneurship” in the title of the paper, but details an empirical study

that analyzes the relationship between SME managerial practices and their

entrepreneurial orientation – a related, but different, construct.

Lastly, Ketchen, et al. (2014)’s discussion on creating a research agenda for the

informal economy for the SEJ was omitted, as this article simple discusses future

research opportunities and gaps for the this very specific topic, rather than contributing

to the strategic entrepreneurship field (by identifying overall field gaps, for example).

Only scholarly papers from peer-reviewed journals (specifically journals listed in the

Association of Business School (ABS) Academic Journal Quality Guide – Version 4) are

included in this analysis. The main reason is to ensure that the journals included in the

analysis are only those that focus on publishing and disseminating the results of

academic research and scholarship. Works excluded from this analysis include (but are

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not necessarily limited to): working papers, theses and dissertations, trade journal

articles, conference papers, book reviews, and magazine articles.

Google Scholar was used to double-check the exhaustiveness of the literature search of

the two above databases, as it easily provides the ability to search for papers citing a

particular paper. For example, a search of papers citing Ireland, et al. (2003) that may

potentially meet the criteria stated above was conducted. This search returned three

papers omitted from both the ABI Inform and EBSCO searches (Yan and Hu, 2008;

Lumpkin, et al., 2011; Obeng, et al., 2012).

For the first database (ABI/INFORM), a search was built using the following criteria: the

phrase “strategic entrepreneurship” must appear in either the title or the abstract of the

paper (or both). Initial search results totaled 84 results. By filtering results to display

scholarly journals only, there were 58 results.

For the second database (EBSCO), a search was built using the phrase “strategic

entrepreneurship.” Initial search results from scholarly journals totaled 47 results

(without additional filters).

Google Scholar results, after manually compiling and filtering the list, totaled 47 papers.

As previously mentioned, three papers from the Google Scholar search were not

included in the EBSCO or ABI Inform search results. The purpose of the Google

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Scholar search was to catch any papers meeting the aforementioned criteria not found

by the other two databases.

All three lists of results were checked against each other to reconcile duplicates and

eliminate papers that did not meet the criteria. A final list of 47 scholarly papers about

strategic entrepreneurship that included the phrase “strategic entrepreneurship” in the

title and/or abstract was compiled and analyzed.

Literature Search Results

Of the 47 scholarly papers that met the criteria, 20 were empirical studies (16

quantitative and 5 qualitative) and 27 were theory papers, all written between 2001 and

2014 (inclusive). The fact that theory papers exceeded empirical papers is not

surprising, considering the newness of the strategic entrepreneurship field (and

ambiguity over its boundaries), resulting in a limited empirical history. Appendix A has

the full list of 47 academic papers analyzed.

Figure 1 shows a breakdown of the journals in which the analyzed papers were

published. The graph shows a fair spread of articles over a variety of journals, with the

Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal (34%) and Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice

(15%) taking the majority.

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Figure 1. Breakdown of Analyzed Papers by Journal

Figure 2 shows the percentages of SE publications analyzed in strategy,

entrepreneurship, and other disciplines (as determined by journal topic types). Of the

nine topic areas identified, strategic entrepreneurship took the lead (34% of the papers

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analyzed), entrepreneurship came in second (23%), and general management came in

third (15%). Strategy was the fourth most popular category (9%), but most of the

literature analyzed came from the latter three areas.

Figure 2. Breakdown of Analyzed Papers by Field

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Figure 3 shows frequency of SE publications per year in academic journals from 2001

to 2014. The number of publications from 2001 to 2006 were not notable, with a

considerate spike in 2007 (probably because the SEJ was established that year).

Figure 3. Frequency of Strategic Entrepreneurship Publications from 2001-2014

Overall, 11 papers analyzed emerged out of the entrepreneurship domain, while only

four of the papers analyzed emerged out of strategy (i.e. strategic management). The

Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal published the most of the analyzed papers (16

total), making it the most popular field in the analysis. The field did not seem to gain

popularity until 2007, which featured a surge of papers published on the topic because

of the establishment of the SEJ.

1!0!

1! 1! 1! 1!

10!

1!

11!

7!

5! 5!

3!

0!

2001!2002!2003!2004!2005!2006!2007!2008!2009!2010!2011!2012!2013!2014!

Page 32: A Comprehensive Review of Strategic Entrepreneurship

19

GENERAL DISCUSSION

The Origins and History of Strategic Entrepreneurship

While strategic entrepreneurship itself has a relatively short history, the construct

originates from research traditions several decades in the making.

SE has its earlier roots in the field of economics (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010) with the

works of Joseph Schumpeter in the 1930s (then later in the field of management with

constructs such as corporate entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial orientation in the

1990s). Schumpeter (1942)’s writings on creative destruction, where industrial and

market dynamics “destroy” old business models and new ones emerge from innovative

entrepreneurial firms and less-innovative incumbents are replaced and a higher degree

of economic growth is achieved in the longer term, have greatly influenced the domain

of entrepreneurship. In Schumpeter (1942)’s framework, entrepreneurship refers to the

creation of new productive resource combinations through the act of innovation. The

Schumpeterian definition also views entrepreneurship contextually as the key factor

leading to fundamental shifts in entire production systems, thus implicitly making

entrepreneurship a fundamental strategic consideration for all types of organizations

(Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). Therefore, Schumpeter’s work suggests that continued

adherence to existing strategic frameworks in a performance-maximizing manner is

unsustainable and inadequate for guaranteeing the long-term profitability of a firm. The

Schumpeterian tradition is featured in studies that focus on entrepreneurship as a way

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of describing and characterizing a firm’s actions. For value creation, entrepreneurial

firms focus on innovative, proactive and risk-taking behaviors conducive to the

formation of new business models and organizational forms (Lumpkin and Dess, 1996).

With contemporary origins in corporate entrepreneurship, the concept of applying

entrepreneurial actions or intentions within a large organizational context is nothing

new. Burgelman (1983) proposes “strategic corporate entrepreneurship” as an early

conceptual integration of administrated (”bureaucratic,” or corporate) economic activity

and entrepreneurial economic activity. He even provides a conceptual framework for his

theory. He empirically examined the relationship between strategic management and

entrepreneurship in large firms. Burgelman (1983) also provides a set of guidelines for

organizations to employ strategic corporate entrepreneurship. He emphasizes middle

managers as important in implementing strategic corporate entrepreneurship – an

emphasis that is echoed later in some recent SE literature (i.e. Ireland and Webb,

2007).

Other earlier studies explore the relationship between strategic management and

entrepreneurship. Zahra (1991) and Zahra and Covin (1995) led empirical studies to

prove a correlation between corporate entrepreneurship and firm performance. This

connection is echoed in seminal theoretical strategic entrepreneurship literature as well

– although no strong empirical foundation supporting the connection between SE and

improved firm performance currently exists. Luke and Verreynne (2006) and Luke, et al.

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(2011) are two of the few empirical studies within the SE field and the only studies that

seek to create an empirically supported and driven framework for strategic

entrepreneurship. Nevertheless, both studies confirm the existence of SE within an

applied business setting (in this case, public enterprises) – an important first step in

advancing the field empirically.

Research on entrepreneurial orientation in the 1990s and 2000s has also provided

some basis for the SE construct. Corporate entrepreneurship (CE) is one conceptual

antecedent of strategic entrepreneurship. Barringer and Bluedorn (1999) wrote a

heavily-cited paper on the intersection between corporate entrepreneurship and

strategic management – a concept that anticipates strategic entrepreneurship (as the

intersection between entrepreneurship and strategic management). As Kyrgidou and

Hughes (2010) put it, “managers must maximize the pursuit of new business

opportunities while simultaneously maximizing the generation and application of

temporary competitive advantages to sustainably create organizational value. It is this

key management problem that has led to convergence in studies of entrepreneurship

(opportunity-seeking behavior) and strategic management (advantage-seeking

behavior); and strategic entrepreneurship …[is] a new concept [developed] to examine

this convergence.”

Shane and Venkataraman (2000) built on the Schumpeterian tradition by emphasizing

that entrepreneurship is a “nexus” that involves entrepreneurial individuals seizing and

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exploiting lucrative opportunities. They described the field as “involv[ing] the study of

sources of opportunities; the processes of discovery, evaluation, and exploitation of

opportunities; and the set of individuals who discover, evaluate, and exploit them”. This

description highlights the importance of opportunity identification in value creation.

Furthermore, scholars agree that opportunity identification and pursuit needs to be

integrated in a strategic framework in order to lead to value creation (Luke and

Verreynne, 2006; Schindehutte and Morris, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Van

Rensburg, 2013).

In fact, for decades, scholars have noted the complementarities between the strategy

and entrepreneurship domains. Schendel and Hofer (1979) argued that “the

entrepreneurial choice is at the heart of the concept of strategy.” Stevenson and Jarillo

(1990) called for the establishment of clear links between the fields of entrepreneurship

and corporate management within a concept they termed “entrepreneurial

management”. Barringer and Bluedorn (1999) studied the relationship between

entrepreneurial intensity and five strategic management practices, finding statistically

significant results for the impact of scanning intensity, planning flexibility, locus of

planning, and strategic controls, proving a logical connection between entrepreneurship

and strategic management. Meyer and Heppard (2000) edited the first scholarly book

addressing the interface between entrepreneurship and strategy to uncover the

components of a firm’s entrepreneurial ‘dominant logic’ independent of firm size. In

essence, for decades, scholars have been discussing intersections between the

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entrepreneurship and strategic management domains, leading up to the genesis of the

strategic entrepreneurship field.

Others have developed other related concepts to strategic entrepreneurship as

conceptual antecedents to the construct. Mintzberg (1973) first introduced the notion of

entrepreneurial strategy-making. Miller (1983) first described the concept of an

entrepreneurial firm. Pinchot (1985) introduced the concept of an “intrapreneur” as the

entrepreneur active within a large firm. Then Covin and Slevin (1989) coined the term

“entrepreneurial strategic posture,” defining it as a firm’s competitive orientation on a

spectrum from conservative to entrepreneurial. McGrath and MacMillan (2000)

integrated the thinking from both fields to develop the entrepreneurial mindset concept,

arguing that those with an entrepreneurial mindset passionately seek new opportunities

(i.e. entrepreneurship) but they also pursue only the best opportunities and then pursue

those with discipline (i.e. strategic management).

One major conceptual antecedent of strategic entrepreneurship is Lumpkin and Dess

(1996)’s construct of entrepreneurial orientation (EO). The dimensions of EO build on

Schumpeterian economic tradition, Covin and Slevin (1989), and Covin and Slevin

(1991). SE shares many parallels with the entrepreneurial orientation (EO) construct.

For example, in that increased EO within a firm ultimately leads to increased wealth

creation (i.e. firm profitability) (Lumpkin and Dess, 1996; Dess and Lumpkin 2005), just

as SE is posited to lead to long-term value creation. In fact, EO is a concept later

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echoed in Ireland, et al. (2003)’s framework as “entrepreneurial mindset,” one of the

four essential components of strategic entrepreneurship.

Additionally, earlier work on the exploration/exploitation tradeoff “predicts” the formation

of the SE construct (e.g. March, 1991), as this tradeoff is central to the strategic

entrepreneurial process (Ireland and Webb, 2009). Organizational ambidexterity, or an

organization’s ability to be aligned and efficient in its management of today’s business

demands while simultaneously being adaptive to changes in the environment (Raisch

and Birkinshaw, 2008), is a similar construct to exploration and exploitation within SE

and emerges from exploration/exploitation literature previous to the emergence of SE

literature.

The Genesis of the Strategic Entrepreneurship Field

According to Van Rensburg (2013), Herbert and Brazeal (1989) were the first to

introduce the term “strategic entrepreneurship” in a conference paper. The strategic

entrepreneurship field was born with a dedicated 2001 special issue on strategic

entrepreneurship in the Strategic Management Journal with Hitt, et al. (2001)’s article,

“Strategic entrepreneurship: entrepreneurial strategies for wealth creation.” However,

the field only gained academic legitimacy and status with the creation of the Strategic

Entrepreneurship Journal (SEJ) in 2007.

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Ireland et al. (2001) viewed strategic management as a context for entrepreneurial

actions and introduced strategic entrepreneurship as the intersection between

entrepreneurship and strategy. Hitt, et al. (2001) suggested that strategic

entrepreneurship (a new construct) is entrepreneurial action with strategic perspective,

involving the integration of entrepreneurial (i.e., opportunity- seeking behavior) and

strategic (i.e., advantage- seeking) perspectives in developing and taking actions

designed to create wealth. As the construct has developed over the past decade or so,

many different theoretical frameworks have been brought forth, presenting inconsistent

and changing dimensions of the construct (Luke, et al., 2011). These different

conceptualizations will be analyzed and discussed in later sections.

Earlier papers on SE emphasize that the appropriate application of SE can lead to value

creation (e.g. financial or otherwise) within firms (Hitt, et. al 2001; Ireland et. al. 2001;

Ketchen, et. al. 2007). Empirical studies explicitly linking SE to increased value creation

(such as those for corporate entrepreneurship discussed above; i.e. Zahra, 1991; Zahra

and Covin, 1995) have yet to be published.

In essence, the concept of strategic entrepreneurship highlights the complementarities

within strategy and entrepreneurship (Agarwal, et al., 2010). “Strategic” can be defined

as “that which relates to the long-term prospects of the company and has a critical

influence on its success or failure,” while “entrepreneurship” has found its most

enduring definition in the Schumpetarian notion of the creation of new products,

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processes, markets, and organizational forms (Agarwal, et al., 2010). The field of

entrepreneurship and its formation is discussed in the next section.

Key Points

Strategic entrepreneurship emerges from economic, entrepreneurship and strategy

research traditions that are several decades in the making.

The relationship between strategic management and entrepreneurship has been

studied for many years, but strategic entrepreneurship is the first construct to explicitly

describe an integration of the knowledge and questions of both fields and lead to the

subsequent creation of a brand new field straddling both domains.

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THE FIELD OF STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP

Nag, et al. (2007) described strategic management as a relatively young academic field

“whose consensual meaning might be expected to be fragile, even lacking.” This exact

description can be applied to strategic entrepreneurship, a young and emerging

academic field requiring stricter boundary definitions and a stronger empirical

foundation. SE has also experienced many reconceptualizations (discussed in a later

section), just like strategic management.

An academic field is a socially constructed entity (Kuhn, 1962) and the body of

knowledge that constitutes a field is a socially constructed product (Astley, 1985). In

comparison to a formal organization, an academic field has socially negotiated

boundaries and only exists if a critical mass of scholars believe it to exist and adopt a

shared conception of its essential meaning (Astley, 1985). Shared meaning is not

assured, as consensus may become diluted or blurred for several reasons, including:

heterogeneity of members’ training, the intellectual pull and hegemony of adjacent

fields, and an ever-shifting body of knowledge and theory (Astley, 1985; Nag, et al.,

2007). However, the following discussion will show that certain milestones in the history

of strategic entrepreneurship provide evidence supporting the existence of consensus

among scholars for the existence of the field.

The establishment of a top-tier academic journal for the field is one such milestone and

could represent Astley (1985)’s notion of “critical mass.” The Strategic Management

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Society (SMS) established the Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal (SEJ) in 2007 as a

sister publication of the Strategic Management Journal (SMJ; a top-tier management

journal) to fill a gap that existed in the coverage of the intersection and integration of

entrepreneurship and strategic management and to expand on the natural relationships

that exists between the two domains (Schendel and Hitt, 2007). The SMS posit that the

SEJ is positioned to fill the gap that exists by “expanding and developing the natural

relationship that exists between strategic management and entrepreneurship,” and will

do so with a level of scholarship and quality matching other top quality journals by using

the same high standards of the SMJ (Schendel and Hitt, 2007).

The first issue included an introduction by Schendel and Hitt (2007) that outlined the ten

key topic areas on which the journal will focus; these focus areas evolved out of the six

original domains proposed by Ireland, et al. (2001). These focus areas are:

1. Strategy vs. entrepreneurship

2. Creativity, imagination, and opportunities

3. Risk and uncertainty

4. Innovation

5. Change

6. Technology

7. Entrepreneurial actions, innovation, and appropriability

8. Behavioral characteristics of entrepreneurial activity

9. Entrepreneurship and economic growth

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10. Social role of entrepreneurship

In essence, Schendel and Hitt (2007) defined the field using these ten broad subject

areas, although “defining the field in this way in an important sense avoids defining the

field – it provides little or no guidance to young scholars interested in contributing to an

emerging field, as it is unclear as to what is and not included within those field

boundaries” (Schendel and Hitt, 2007). However, these ten themes represent a

consensus among SE scholars as to what research in the field should look like, as well

as agreement that such a field indeed exists. The ten themes shall frame this paper’s

discussion on SE’s definition, boundaries, and nature, as well as the discussion on the

current state of research within the field and research gaps.

Furthermore, the citation counts of foundational SE articles such as Ireland, et al.

(2001), Hitt, et al. (2001), and Ireland, et al. (2003) are all in the several hundreds (the

second milestone for the field), meaning that these articles have had a significant

impact in management studies and point towards a consensus among scholars for

legitimacy of the field and construct.

A comprehensive review of existing conceptual frameworks and definitions of strategic

entrepreneurship contained in this paper reveals that the field is still growing,

accelerated by the establishment of the SEJ. Although some posit that strategic

entrepreneurship is a synonym for the better empirically-supported corporate

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entrepreneurship, a valid and reliable empirical support-base for SE could help

differentiate the construct from CE, as SE is a unique concept (demonstrated in later

sections).

Integration of Strategy and Entrepreneurship

The SE field integrates theory and research from multiple disciplines – particularly from

entrepreneurship and strategic management. The implications of the SE construct are

important for scholars and managers alike for a better understanding of how firms

identify and exploit entrepreneurial opportunities, establish and sustain competitive

advantages, and create wealth (Ireland, et al., 2003). Entrepreneurship and strategic

management have been argued to explore complementary questions (Boone, et al.,

2013), and the symbiotic relationship between the two facilitates understanding of firms’

wealth-creating abilities (Ireland, et al., 2003; Ireland, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2007).

This relationship is argued to exist because determining how firms adapt to

environmental change as a path to recognizing and exploiting opportunities created by

uncertainties and discontinuities is of central interest to each domain (Hitt, et al., 2001;

Ireland, 2007). There is less agreement among scholars regarding the degree to which

the domain is concerned directly or explicitly with explaining firms’ wealth-creating

abilities (Ireland, 2007).

Entrepreneurship is concerned with questions involving the search for competitive

advantages at entry, whereas strategic management studies focus primarily on the

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sustainability of a competitive advantage over time. Scholars have begun investigating

the questions central to both strategy and entrepreneurship, including the formation of

new ventures, the origin and development of firm capabilities, strategic renewal efforts

of incumbents, and the dynamics of innovation and macroeconomic growth (Agarwal, et

al., 2010), but the SE field provides a much more specific and direct platform for this

sort of research.

Foss and Lyngsie (2011) note that SE appears to have dropped strategy’s search for

the conditions of single, sustainable competitive advantage, and instead focuses on the

entrepreneurial pursuit of a string of temporary advantages under the label of “wealth

creation.” Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) hypothesize that managers must maximize the

pursuit of new business opportunities while simultaneously maximizing the generation

and application of temporary competitive advantages to sustainably create

organizational value. They suggest that this key management problem has led to the

convergence in the studies of both entrepreneurship (opportunity-seeking behavior) and

strategic management (advantage-seeking behavior) into the field of SE. SE research

has identified a large set of variables that may drive such firm-level entrepreneurship,

for example, borrowing (from strategic management) notions of “strategic intent” or

(from entrepreneurship) “entrepreneurial orientation.” Therefore, strategic

entrepreneurship emerges from the need to bridge both entrepreneurial and strategic

perspectives (Boone, et al., 2013) for successful performance, as noted by earlier

scholars (i.e. Stevenson and Jarillo, 1990).

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Therefore, strategic entrepreneurship emerges from the notion that there is a logical

intersection between the two domains and deals with the “identification and exploitation

of opportunities while simultaneously creating and sustaining a competitive advantage”

(Kuratko and Audretsch, 2009). The intersection of entrepreneurship research

(opportunity seeking) and strategic management research (advantage seeking),

therefore, constitutes the new field. It deals with the actions a firm undertakes in

exploiting new innovations, which result from the firm’s efforts to continuously explore

opportunities (Ireland and Webb, 2007). SE literature integrates entrepreneurship and

strategy research to study the antecedents, effects, and mechanisms of exploring and

exploiting behaviors and suggests “the existence of positive performance effects

derived from the balanced application of these strategies” (Hitt, et al., 2011; Ireland, et

al., 2003; Hitt, et al., 2011; Siren, et al., 2012).

In essence, the SE field provides a venue for scholars to combine knowledge from both

disciplines to carry out studies that examine how firms create wealth and/or value.

Wealth (or value) creation is central to both strategy and entrepreneurship and is the

major connecting point between the two fields and consequently serves as the focus of

the strategic entrepreneurship field. In other words, strategic entrepreneurship

integrates knowledge from both disciplines to provide a richer understanding of how

firms can create wealth. After all, it can be argued that value creation is the primary

phenomenon that is of interest to organizational scholars (Ireland, 2007).

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Key Points

The creation of the Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal (SEJ) in 2007 officially

established and legitimized strategic entrepreneurship as an academic field of study

within management studies. Schendel and Hitt (2007) outlined ten key topic areas that

provide a loose definition for the field.

The strategic entrepreneurship field emerges from the recognition that both strategy

and entrepreneurship seek to answer many of the same questions and the notion that

there is a logical intersection between the two domains. Thus, this field provides

scholars a venue to combine knowledge from both disciplines to gain a richer

understanding of how firms create wealth or value.

Wealth creation is central to both strategy and entrepreneurship and is the major

connecting point between the two fields and consequently serves as the focus of the

strategic entrepreneurship field.

In essence, strategic entrepreneurship as a construct is derived from the logical

intersection and integration of both entrepreneurship and strategy disciplines,

combining the knowledge from both academic research streams, as both fields seek to

answer many of the same research questions.

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THE FOUR QUESTIONS

Boundaries of Strategic Entrepreneurship

To preface this part of the discussion, the arguments made herein (just as in the “Field”

section) operate from the premise that the body of knowledge that constitutes

administrative science is a socially constructed product (Astley, 1985). As such,

consensus among scholars is the primary driver of the existence of new constructs,

new fields of research, or new paradigms within management studies. In other words,

consensus drives the legitimacy of a new field and construct such as strategic

entrepreneurship. Therefore, consensus as the standard by which one could determine

academic field or construct legitimacy shall form the basis for the discussion of the

boundaries of the SE field and related construct.

Additionally, it is important to note that while some scholars take a narrower view on

defining strategic entrepreneurship (i.e. they define SE as a subdomain of corporate

entrepreneurship (which lies firmly in the domain of entrepreneurship) that includes

entrepreneurial activities that do not necessarily include the creation of new business

units, such as strategic renewal, sustained regeneration, domain redefinition,

organizational rejuvenation, and business model reconstruction (Sharma and Chrisman,

1999)), this research assumes a broader view on SE (as proposed by Ireland, et al.,

2003). This broader view puts SE at the intersection of the fields of strategy and

entrepreneurship, integrating perspectives and knowledge from both fields (see “Where

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Does Strategic Entrepreneurship Fit?”). This section will explain how this broader view

is overwhelmingly supported by the extant literature.

As a Separate Field of Study

In a special issue of the Strategic Management Journal (SMJ), Hitt, et al. (2001)

described strategic entrepreneurship as “entrepreneurial action with a strategic

perspective.” In short, strategic entrepreneurship is the integration of entrepreneurial

behavior (i.e., opportunity- seeking) and strategic mindset (i.e., advantage- seeking) in

developing and taking value-creating actions. Hitt, et al. (2001)’s paper can be seen as

the culmination of the literature discussing the possibility of an intersection between

strategic management and entrepreneurship before it (i.e. Burgelman, 1983; Covin and

Slevin, 1989; Zahra, 1991; Barringer and Bluedorn; Covin and Miles, 1999; Ireland, et

al., 2001). Hitt, et al. (2001) argue that firms need to strategically leverage

entrepreneurial to sustain a competitive advantage (Foss and Lyngsie, 2011). Thus, a

firm’s strategic intent must be to continuously discover and exploit entrepreneurial

opportunities, in order “to continuously create competitive advantages that lead to

maximum wealth creation” (Kuratko and Audretsch, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010;

Hitt, et al., 2011; Foss and Lyngsie, 2011).

In essence, Hitt, et al. (2001) established strategic entrepreneurship both as a field of

study and as a specific construct (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2009; Foss and Lyngsie,

2011), although a great deal of work prior to 2001 eventually led to the creation of the

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field. The emergence of the SE field is in response to research gaps in the neighboring

fields of entrepreneurship and strategic management (Hitt, et al., 2011; Ireland, et al.,

2003; Foss and Lyngsie, 2011). Hitt, et al. (2001) describes how the fields of strategic

management and entrepreneurship have “both focused on how firms adapt to

environmental change and exploit opportunities created by uncertainties and

discontinuities in the creation of wealth.” They present strategic entrepreneurship as an

important concept suggesting that new ventures and established firms need to be

simultaneously entrepreneurial and strategic. They also suggest that firms require

certain types of critical resources and capabilities to achieve this integration and to

create wealth.

The question of how firms create and sustain a competitive advantage (emerging from

the strategic management academic tradition) while simultaneously identifying and

exploiting new opportunities (from the entrepreneurship academic tradition) is “at the

heart” of strategic entrepreneurship research (Siren, et al., 2012).

Meyer and Heppard (2000) argue that strategic and entrepreneurial thinking are

inseparable, as insights from strategic management cannot be understood without an

understanding of the insights from entrepreneurship, and vice versa. Hitt, et al. (2001)

argue that entrepreneurial and strategic perspectives should be integrated to examine

entrepreneurial strategies that create wealth and deem this approach “strategic

entrepreneurship.” Therefore, the field of strategic entrepreneurship emerges from the

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understanding that strategic management provides context for entrepreneurial actions,

and value creation is at the heart of both entrepreneurship and strategic management.

In fact, other scholars previous to Hitt, et al. (2001)’s paper have called for an

integration of strategic and entrepreneurial thinking. Entrepreneurship and strategic

management discuss value creation with different focuses and viewpoints, but

combining the two disciplines’ perspectives can provide a deeper understanding of how

firms can create and achieve wealth, hence the emergence of strategic

entrepreneurship as a field of study. Hitt, et al. (2001) submit that strategic

entrepreneurship can provide entrepreneurship with a commonly accepted and well-

developed paradigm for research in the field, but also submit that the integration of

theory and research from the two fields can enrich the research and practice of both

strategic management and entrepreneurship.

Ireland, et al. (2003) built on Hitt, et al. (2001)’s early definition of the SE field and

construct. They suggest that firms create wealth by identifying opportunities in their

external environments and then developing competitive advantages to exploit them.

They conclude that strategic entrepreneurship results from the integration of

entrepreneurship and strategic management knowledge, and the field’s primary

purpose is to help advance the understanding of how firms create wealth (new ventures

and established firms alike).

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The central idea of the field is opportunity-seeking behaviors and advantage-seeking

behaviors – the former as the central subject of entrepreneurship and the latter as the

central subject of strategic management (Foss and Lyngsie, 2011). This emerging field

itself is very young, existing for little more than a decade, culminating in the

establishment of the Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal (SEJ) in 2007 – the first formal

top-tier journal dedicated to advancing the SE field. The establishment of the SEJ is the

singular major event that legitimized SE as a valid academic field of research. This

event is a sign of a consensus among influential scholars that strategic

entrepreneurship is not only an important construct to study, but also a an important

and legitimate field of study that needs a separate journal to help advance the field.

After all, the Strategic Management Society (SMS) established the SEJ and are the

same group that established the Strategic Management Journal, a top-tier business

journal held in high regard.

Hitt, et al. (2001) further posit that the integration of the theoretical perspectives from

strategic management and entrepreneurship will help develop a commonly accepted

and well-developed paradigm for entrepreneurship, as they submit that this field of

study currently enjoys no such paradigm. They also posit that the integration of

entrepreneurial thinking benefits strategic management. Firms that do not engage in

“dreaming, exploring, creating, pioneering, and inventing” risk other firms taking their

“markets, customer, best employees, …their assets”, (Hitt, et al., 2001) and ultimately,

their profits. Firms require certain types of critical resources and capabilities to achieve

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this integration and to create wealth (for example, slack resources) (Ireland, et al.,

2003).

Although the SE field is still extremely young, progress has been made in defining a

research agenda that seeks to merge the opportunity seeking perspective of the

entrepreneurship literature with the advantage seeking perspective of strategic

management (Foss and Lyngsie, 2011). The establishment of the SEJ has further

clarified the research agenda of the field, with the aforementioned ten key topic areas of

interest (see previous sections) outlined in Schendel and Hitt (2007)’s introduction to

the first edition of the journal. Foss and Lyngsie (2011) submit that the field’s research

agenda has been established because the phenomenon of interest (i.e. the dependent

variable) as firm value creation has been defined, as well as scholars beginning to

analyze various antecedents in terms of variables such as entrepreneurial orientation

and other firm-level variables that capture the firm’s motivation and ability to engage in

the discovery of opportunities and the exploitation of those opportunities that are

highest in value creation.

As a Construct

While Ireland, et al. (2003) clearly define the strategic entrepreneurship construct in

relation to itself, its place in the field of strategic management (SM) and entrepreneurial

studies and in relation to other constructs (such as corporate entrepreneurship,

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intrapreneurship, and entrepreneurial orientation) has not yet been clearly defined or

determined.

Although the discussion and elaboration of key elements of strategic entrepreneurship’s

definition provided in one of the coming sections is an extremely important intellectual

exercise in the analysis of the nature of the SE construct and its description, a review of

the literature suggests that the boundaries of strategic entrepreneurship must also be

defined to establish its place within the domains of entrepreneurship and strategic

management, respectively. This is especially relevant since there has been great

discussion among scholars on whether strategic entrepreneurship and corporate

entrepreneurship (a construct with a much longer academic tradition) are referring to

the same domain (Meyer, 2009; Schindehutte and Morris, 2009; Van Rensburg, 2013).

The boundaries and parameters of SE remain largely unspecified (Schindehutte and

Morris, 2009; Klein, et al., 2013). Thus, the following discussion will clarify the

boundaries of SE, both within respect to entrepreneurship and strategic management

and in relation to other constructs, such as corporate entrepreneurship.

As a construct, SE also has a relatively short research history, although several

scholars have come up with different domains and conceptual frameworks (even a

couple of qualitative empirical studies testing conceptual frameworks) in attempt to

define and describe the components and antecedents of strategic entrepreneurship

within a firm (an overview and analysis of these different frameworks and

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conceptualizations is included in a later section.) Hitt, et al. (2001) posit that strategic

entrepreneurship is “an important concept suggesting that new ventures and

established firms need to be simultaneously entrepreneurial and strategic.” Ireland, et

al. (2003) firmly argue that SE is a distinctive and unique construct through which firms

can create wealth and that SE also contributes to the understanding of how firms can

create wealth. This research posits that early research efforts to differentiate SE as a

unique construct do not adequately describe its distinctive dimensions; thus, this

research identifies the five critical dimensions of SE to better explicate it as a unique

construct. In essence, Ireland, et al. (2003) submit that SE is a very important construct

for scholars and managers to contribute to a better understanding of how firms identify

and exploit entrepreneurial opportunities, establish and sustain competitive advantages

and create wealth.

Ketchen, et al. (2007) give these four main assertions about the nature of strategic

entrepreneurship. This rest of this section will build on these assertions to provide

clearer boundary definitions for the construct. First, strategic entrepreneurship, as a

field, is the melding of the strategy and entrepreneurship domains. Secondly, firms

pursuing engage in both the opportunity-seeking activities required by entrepreneurship

and the advantage-seeking activities required by strategy. Firms desiring to create

wealth on a continual basis cannot rely exclusively on the activities associated with

either entrepreneurship or strategy. The reason for this is that actions taken to

implement a chosen strategy enable a firm to extract value from existing domains. As

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such, these actions foster value creation in the short run. Third, an appropriate

managerial mindset is required in a firm that wishes to employ strategic

entrepreneurship. Finally, strategic entrepreneurship requires a continuous flow of

innovations.

The following subsections will also show that strategic entrepreneurship promotes long-

term value creation; not just short-term performance gains, as suggested by Ketchen, et

al. (2007) above. But continuous innovation is still one of the keys to successful

strategic entrepreneurship. The most important element missing from the above

description of SE is that SE is the continuous balance of opportunity-seeking and

advantage-seeking behaviors, as supported by other extant (Ireland, et al., 2003;

Ireland and Webb, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Hitt, et al., 2011).

Components of Strategic Entrepreneurship

Strategic entrepreneurship involves both the opportunity-seeking behavior that is largely

the province of corporate entrepreneurship (a subdomain of entrepreneurship), as well

as advantage-seeking behavior from strategic management. SE encompasses a set of

activities that allow firms to consistently and effectively manage their resources to

combat uncertainty in the external environment through the exploration of future

competitive advantages while exploiting current advantages (Ireland and Webb, 2009).

The exploration versus exploitation construct (March, 1991; Gupta, et al., 2006; Raisch,

et al., 2009) is an extremely important building block used for strategic

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entrepreneurship. Exploration and exploitation behaviors are a distinct part of different

definitions and descriptions of SE (Ireland, et al., 2003; Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland

and Webb, 2009; Schindehutte and Morris, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Hitt, et

al., 2011; Kraus, et al., 2011). Strategic entrepreneurship combines the creative and

entrepreneurial qualities of exploration with the discipline of strategic exploitation

activities.

On top of the balance of opportunity-seeking (exploration) and advantage-seeking

(exploitation behaviors as a key feature of strategic entrepreneurship, the original

framework for SE as described by Ireland, et al. (2003) describes SE as having four

components:

1. An entrepreneurial mindset

2. An entrepreneurial culture and entrepreneurial leadership

3. The strategic management of resources and applying creativity

4. Developing innovation

Exploration and exploitation (i.e. organizational ambidexterity – the joint pursuit of

exploration and exploitation strategies) are the antecedents of the opportunity-seeking

and advantage-seeking behaviors mentioned in the original conceptual framework for

strategic entrepreneurship by Ireland, et al. (2003). The latter terminology is echoed in

other definitions given for SE, such as those by Hitt, et al. (2001), Ketchen, et al.

(2007), and Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) (refer to Appendix B). Given the structural,

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cultural, and operational differences between exploration and exploitation, another

tension associated with strategic entrepreneurship concerns the transition process

between exploration and exploitation. Ireland and Webb (2009) posit that the

differences in the activities of exploration and exploitation call for an additional

extensive, time-consuming, and resource-intensive transition process. After all,

exploration and exploitation are antagonistic processes in nature (Schindehutte and

Morris, 2009). However, prior empirical research supports the assertion of positive

performance impacts of ambidexterity, which bodes well for the possibility of future

empirical support for increased performance impacts from effective SE.

In other words, SE involves the effective integration of entrepreneurial actions and

strategic management actions to create wealth. SE allows those leading and managing

firms to simultaneously address the dual challenges of exploiting current competitive

advantages (the purview of strategic management) while exploring for opportunities (the

purview of entrepreneurship) for which future competitive advantages can be developed

and used as the path to value and wealth creation (Hitt, et al., 2011). Entrepreneurial

actions are those actions oriented to novelty; they are newly-fashioned behaviors

through which companies exploit opportunities others have not yet identified or explored

(Ireland, et al., 2001). In other words, entrepreneurial actions are a fundamental

behavior by a firm that allows them to move into new markets, gain new customers,

and/or combine existing resources in new and innovative ways (Ireland, et al., 2001).

Entrepreneurial actions are often regarded as an essential behavior to facilitate firm

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survival in a rapidly-changing market environment (Ireland, et al., 2001) and to combat

uncertainty created by such an environment (Ireland and Webb, 2009). Hitt, et al.

(2011) suggest that successfully using SE challenges large, established firms to learn

how to become more entrepreneurial and challenges smaller entrepreneurial ventures

to learn how to become more strategic.

In other words, if entrepreneurship is understood as the identification and creation of

new opportunities, and if strategic management is understood as the transformation of

these opportunities into a sustainable competitive advantage, then entrepreneurial

opportunity seeking can also be regarded as strategic behavior with the aim of value

creation (Kraus, et al., 2011).

Strategy is the process of planning that emphasizes improved decision-making through

effectively managing resources within a framework of structures, systems and

processes (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). Strategy is also considered a primary

advantage that differentiates entrepreneurial firms and creates organizational

excellence and can provide the context within which firms can exploit identified

opportunities through their current strategic platform and through structured strategic

actions, thereby aiding firms to specialize and gain competitive advantage. (Kyrgidou

and Hughes, 2010). Strategic actions are taken to select and implement the firm's

strategies. Often enough, many of these strategies are framed around the pursuit of

entrepreneurial opportunities by taking entrepreneurial actions (Ireland, et al., 2001).

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Strategic actions provide the context within which innovations, which often are the

product of newly fashioned behaviors, are developed and commercialized. These action

types intersect; indeed, analysis of various aspects of this intersection is the focus of

this special issue. Successfully integrating entrepreneurial and strategic actions

improves a firm's ability to grow and create wealth. Finally, wealth creation is concerned

with developing sustainable income streams.

Entrepreneurial firms risk focusing excessively on opportunity recognition and risk-

taking activities; lacking a balanced strategic focus can then undermine the benefits and

value their entrepreneurial initiatives might generate. As such, they become incapable

of gaining the advantages that entrepreneurial behavior has to offer. Still, the excessive

formalization of firm organizing activity that strategy entails can create conditions that

restrict rapid adaptation to change and tolerance of frame-breaking ideas, which in turn

might prevent the firm from capturing the benefits that its entrepreneurial behavior could

create. Balancing entrepreneurship and strategic management through the use of

strategic entrepreneurship, consequently, can help firms avoid the trap of excessive

risk-taking activities while preventing inertia caused by iteratively adding to present

advantages (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010).

SE results from combining attributes of strategy and entrepreneurship. Here, the firm

combines exploration-oriented attributes with exploitation- oriented attributes to develop

consistent streams of innovation and to create and maintain competitive advantages

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(Ireland and Webb, 2007). Thus, SE is concerned with actions the firm intends to take

to exploit the innovations that result from its efforts to continuously explore for

innovation-based opportunities (i.e., new organizational forms, new products, new

processes, etc.) (Ireland and Webb, 2007). An ability to anticipate and then properly

respond to environmental change is one of the important outcomes of effective SE. With

SE, the firm intends to rely on innovation and the exploitation of innovations as the

source of sustainable competitive advantages and effective responses to continuous

environmental changes (Ireland and Webb, 2007). Because “concentrating on either

strategy or entrepreneurship to the exclusion of the other enhances the probability of

firm ineffectiveness or even failure” (Ketchen et al., 2007; Hitt, et al., 2011), SE involves

both entrepreneurship’s opportunity-seeking behaviors and strategic management’s

advantage-seeking behaviors and is useful for all organizations, including family-

oriented firms (Webb, et al., 2010) and new ventures or smaller firms (Kyrgidou and

Hughes, 2010).

Strategic management and entrepreneurship are concerned with creating value and

wealth (Ireland, et al., 2001; HItt, et al., 2011; Ireland, et al., 2003; Hitt, et al., 2011).

Entrepreneurship contributes to a firm’s efforts to create value primarily by identifying

opportunities that can be exploited in a marketplace. In fact, Hitt, et al. (2001) define

entrepreneurship as “the identification and exploitation of previously unexploited

opportunities.” Strategic management (i.e. the full set of commitments, decisions, and

actions required for a firm to achieve strategic competitiveness and earn above-average

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returns) contributes to value- and wealth-creation efforts primarily by forming the

competitive advantages that are the foundation on which a firm competes in a

marketplace (Ireland, et al., 2003; Hitt, et al., 2011). Therefore, entrepreneurship

involves identifying and exploiting opportunities (i.e. opportunity-seeking activities in

SE), and strategic management involves creating and sustaining one or more

competitive advantages as the path through which opportunities are exploited (i.e.

advantage-seeking activities in SE). Also, the effectiveness of strategic

entrepreneurship depends on how firms deploy competence exploration and

competence exploitation processes, described further below (Kyrgidou and Petridou,

2011). However, firms use different processes to explore and to exploit, a fact that

complicates efforts to balance exploration- and exploitation- oriented behaviors (Ireland

and Webb, 2009).

The entrepreneurial components of SE are entrepreneurial mindset and creating

innovation, as per Ireland, et al. (2003)’s framework. The strategic components are the

strategic management of resources and the execution of competitive advantage

(Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010).

Opportunity-seeking or exploration (i.e. entrepreneurship) includes the set of activities

through which firms seek to recognize new ideas and opportunities that serve as the

foundation for future sources of competitive advantage (Ireland and Webb, 2009).

Creativity, experimentation, and a broad search of knowledge stocks beyond what is

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captured in the firm’s existing competencies are examples of the activities that are a

part of the exploration process (March, 1991; Ireland and Webb, 2009). Investments in

processes promoting experimentation, play, and discovery are vital (Kygridou and

Petridou, 2011). Exploration activities have long-term outcomes; therefore, significant

uncertainty is associated with these activities. Therefore, the key to successful

exploration processes is being able to efficiently manage a breadth of resources while

managing the uncertainty that surrounds the potential effectiveness of the resources

(Ireland and Webb, 2009), as well as the firm’s ability to acquire new, diverse

knowledge and subsequently integrate it with existing knowledge (Ireland and Webb,

2007). Identifying ways to position a firm in one or more market spaces to deal with

environmental change is a key outcome sought through exploration (Ireland and Webb,

2007).

Advantage-seeking or exploiting activities (i.e. strategic management) include the

refinement, focusing, and efficiency-based routines that serve as the foundation for the

firm’s current sources of competitive advantage (Ireland and Webb, 2009). More

specifically, exploitation activities are used to incrementally enhance the firm’s existing

competitive advantages. These activities require investments in processes behind

exploitation, the refinement and improvement to augment the firm’s efficiency at

leveraging limited resources, and historical advantages (Kyrgidou and Petridou, 2011).

Because the firm is building on existing advantages, exploitation processes are

characterized by fewer and less influential sources of uncertainty; for example, the

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market size and location may already be well known, or the technology base may be

accepted by suppliers, partners, and customers (Ireland and Webb, 2009). The key to

exploitation involves being able to efficiently manage a relatively narrow set of

resources to facilitate speed and accuracy while managing sources of uncertainty that

affect how the firm engages its competitors in marketplace battles (Ireland and Webb,

2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009). In essence, Ireland and Webb (2009) suggest that

exploration and exploitation have different operational, structural, and cultural attributes.

Innovation in Strategic Entrepreneurship

Hitt, et al. (2001) also suggest a strong interrelationship between innovation and

entrepreneurship; an entrepreneurial mindset (i.e. view to innovation) is required for

founding of new businesses and saving old ones. If firms employ strong innovative

programs to implement entrepreneurial strategies, they can create wealth. Ireland and

Webb (2007) suggest that continuous innovation is at the core of what firms are able to

achieve as a result of balancing exploitation and exploitation (i.e. SE). This continuous

innovation allows for increased firm performance and value creation, as well as the

creation and maintenance of successive competitive advantages to achieve this end.

Thus, SE is concerned with actions the firm intends to take to exploit the innovations

that result from continuous exploration for innovation-based opportunities (Ireland and

Webb, 2007).

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Many papers that conceptualize or describe SE discuss absolute importance of

innovation for strategic entrepreneurship (Ireland, et al., 2001; Hitt, et al., 2001; Ireland,

et al., 2003; Ketchen, et al., 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009;

Kuratko and Audretsch, 2009; Schindehutte and Morris, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes,

2010; Hitt, et al., 2011). Therefore, continuous innovation is a key component of

strategic entrepreneurship.

Innovation has long been part of the entrepreneurship domain and research tradition.

For example, Schumpeter’s classic work (1934, 1942) highlighted the importance of

creativity and innovation within the context of market dynamics. In his view, innovation

stimulates economic development, corporate growth, and wealth creation. Hitt, et al.

(2011) suggest that entrepreneurs create value by leveraging innovation to exploit new

opportunities and to create new product-market domains. Entrepreneurship literature

teaches us that there are at least two types of innovation in which firms can engage—

disruptive and sustaining (Christensen, 1997). Disruptive innovations introduce “new

ways of playing the competitive game”—ways that are different from and conflict with

current business models (Ireland, et al., 2003). Firms committed to disruptive

innovations seek to locate entrepreneurial opportunities to try to proactively influence

their competitive destiny rather than waiting to be influenced by the evolution of the

markets in which they compete (Ireland, et al., 2003). “Radical or disruptive innovation

is derived from identifying and exploiting entrepreneurial opportunities through new

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combinations of resources to create new capabilities that lead to competitive

advantages” (Ireland, et al., 2003).

Incremental or sustaining innovation is the product of learning how to better exploit

existing capabilities that contribute to competitive advantages. Sustaining innovation.

These innovation help incumbents earn higher margins on their products. They are

either simple, incremental engineering improvements or drastic performance

improvements (Christensen, et al., 2002). Incremental improvements can be thought of

as “creative creations” (Ireland, et al., 2003).

Through effective SE, firms are able to engage in both disruptive and sustaining

innovation (Ireland, et al., 2003). Without practicing SE, the firm might overly

concentrate on sustaining innovations and exploit its current advantages, meaning the

firm may miss future opportunities and potential for future competitive advantages for

long-term success. Effective use of SE leads to a comprehensive and integrated

commitment to both sustaining and disruptive innovations as drivers of value creation.

(Ireland, et al., 2003)

Strategic management teaches us that innovation that are the focal points of strategic

entrepreneurship initiatives represent the means through which opportunity is

capitalized upon and can happen “anywhere or everywhere” in a firm (Kuratko and

Audretsch, 2009). In a strategy context, innovation represents a fundamental change

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from the firms’ past strategies, products, markets, organization structures, processes,

capabilities, or business models to new firm strategies or otherwise. Additionally, these

innovations can represent or form the bases for competitive advantages that

fundamentally differentiate a firm from its rivals (Kuratko and Audretsch, 2009). By

emphasizing an opportunity-driven mindset, management seeks to achieve and

maintain a competitively advantageous position for the firm. Kuratko and Audretsch

(2009) provide two possible reference points that can be considered when a firm

exhibits strategic entrepreneurship in relation to innovation:

1. How much the firm is transforming itself relative to where it was before (e.g.,

transforming its products, markets, internal processes, etc.)

2. How much the firm is transforming itself relative to industry conventions or

standards (again, in terms of product offerings, market definitions, internal

processes, and so forth)

In essence, innovation in an entrepreneurship context is described with more focus on

the nature of the product or service itself (in relation to existing markets; i.e. disruptive

or sustaining innovation), while within a strategic management context, these

innovations are described at the firm level of analysis as part of the overall firm strategy

or strategic direction. Combining both these perspectives forms the basis for

innovation’s place within the field of strategic entrepreneurship, forming the potential for

a more comprehensive analysis of how innovations can create firm wealth.

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Value Creation in Strategic Entrepreneurship

Ireland, et al. (2001) posit that entrepreneurial and strategic actions are at the core of

wealth (or value) creation. Entrepreneurial actions occur when companies exploit

opportunities others have not identified or exploited – a “fundamental behavior” of firms

when they move into new markets, seize new customers and/or combine resources in

new ways. Strategic actions are taken to choose and implement a firm’s strategy.

Taken together, both these kinds of actions can help a firm grow and increase its

wealth, or sustainable, long-term income. Both firm leaders and local, state, and federal

governments influence the ability for firms to consistently and continuously create

wealth.

Wealth creation is central to both entrepreneurship and strategic management (Ireland,

et al., 2001; Ireland, et al., 2003) and provides a link between the two disciplines

(although the each field has a slightly different focus on the topic - strategy is concerned

with a firm’s long-term development and entrepreneurship is concerned with actions

taken to create newness (Ireland, et al., 2003; Ireland and Webb, 2007)). Strategic

management scholars seek to understand the causes of performance differentials

across firms, while entrepreneurship scholars study the creation of wealth through the

creation of value (Hitt, et al., 2011). Entrepreneurs are posited to create value by

leveraging innovation to exploit new opportunities and to create new product-market

domains (Hitt, et al., 2011). Managing capabilities and resources to identify and pursue

marketplace opportunities is a central theme for both entrepreneurs and strategists

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(Ireland, et al., 2001). Strategic entrepreneurship can be practiced by organizations

large and small, public and private (in contrast to corporate entrepreneurship, which has

generally been described in the context of larger firms). SE literature submits that

wealth is created only when firms are able to effectively combine opportunity-seeking

behavior (i.e., entrepreneurship) with effective advantage-seeking behavior (i.e.,

strategic management) (Ireland, 2003). In essence, value creation is the link between

strategy and entrepreneurship, thereby making the strategic entrepreneurship construct

a logical integration and connection between the entrepreneurship and strategic

management domains.

In other words, SE crystallizes the mutual support and interdependence that exists

between entrepreneurship and strategic management (Hitt et al., 2002). Strategic

entrepreneurship can be seen as entrepreneurial action that is taken with a strategic

perspective. The integration of entrepreneurial and strategic actions is necessary for

firms to create maximum wealth (Ireland et al., 2001) and to promote strategic growth

(Obeng, et al., 2012). Furthermore, firms desiring to continuously create wealth cannot

rely on either strategy or entrepreneurship alone; rather, firms must successfully

engage in strategic entrepreneurship (Ireland, et al., 2003; Webb, et al., 2010).

Strategic entrepreneurship literature also emphasizes the close relationship between

underlying capabilities and value creation and capture (Klein, et al., 2013). Therefore,

there is a need for entrepreneurial action with strategic perspective.

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As a conceptual framework, strategic entrepreneurship offers a more expansive

perspective on value creation and maximization of firm performance than do the

traditional constructs of strategic management and entrepreneurship alone (Audretsch,

et al., 2009). As a field of study, strategic entrepreneurship aims to examine how new

and established ventures explore and exploit innovative opportunities to create and

sustain competitive advantage (Obeng, et al., 2012). The combination of perspectives

from strategy and entrepreneurship can provide a better picture as to how firms create

wealth – a primary aim of the field.

According to Sharma and Chrisman (1999), corporate entrepreneurship is “the process

whereby an individual or a group of individuals, in association with an existing

organization, create a new organization or instigate renewal or innovation within that

organization.” Ireland, et al. (2003) describe entrepreneurship as the process through

which newness is created. The entrepreneurship process involves combining resources

in novel ways, leading to newness in the form of innovative products or services,

processes, administrative techniques, or structural manifestations, which may, in turn,

serve as a source of value (Ireland and Webb, 2009). Therefore, corporate

entrepreneurship is differentiated from individual entrepreneurship, but is still a subset

of entrepreneurship (Sharma and Chrisman, 1999) as its definition centers around

entrepreneurial newness – a key difference between it and SE. While SE lies at the

intersection between entrepreneurship and strategy, CE is firmly rooted in the

entrepreneurship domain.

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Therefore, firms that engage in corporate entrepreneurship can also engage in strategic

entrepreneurship, but these are two different activities and mindsets (Ireland and Webb,

2009). Corporate entrepreneurship is a form of entrepreneurship, but strategic

entrepreneurship involves the integration of both entrepreneurial and strategic activities

(i.e. balancing exploration and exploitation). Ireland and Webb (2009) submit that a

strategic entrepreneurship mindset is more comprehensive (with a deliberately strong

focus on both opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking behaviors) than a corporate

entrepreneurship mindset (featuring a stronger emphasis on opportunity-seeking, rather

than advantage-seeking behavior). This makes sense, as opportunity-seeking

behaviors are traditionally seen as falling within the domain of entrepreneurship, while

advantage-seeking behaviors are strategic in nature.

Nag, et al. (2007) define the field of strategic management as dealing with “the major

intended and emergent initiatives taken by general managers on behalf of owners,

involving utilization of resources to enhance the performance of firms in their external

environments.” Firms acting strategically will take into account their resources and

assess the internal and external environments in which they compete when formulating

and implementing such initiatives. This definition lends clear connections between

strategic management and strategic entrepreneurship.

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Firstly, “enhanced performance” in the definition is referring to value creation – central

to SE. Exploration and exploitation activities draw upon a firm’s limited stock of

resources (Ireland and Webb, 2009). Strategic entrepreneurship is more “forward-

thinking” than strategic management; as strategically entrepreneurial firms will both

invest in leveraging current sources of competitive advantage (i.e. advantage-

seeking/exploiting behaviors) while balancing investment in developing future sources

of competitive advantage (i.e. opportunity-seeking/exploring behaviors). The latter

exploring behaviors are taken from the field of entrepreneurship; therein lies the

integration between the two fields. As Ireland, et al. (2003) put it, firms create wealth by

identifying opportunities in their external environments and then developing competitive

advantages to exploit them – thus, strategic entrepreneurship results from the

integration of entrepreneurship and strategic management knowledge.

As Kuratko and Audretsch (2009) so eloquently put it, “entrepreneurship is more than a

course of action one pursues; rather it is more than a mindset.” Entrepreneurship can

provide a theme for a company’s entire operations and serve as an integral component

of a firm’s strategy and, in some instances, serve as the core or defining component of

corporate strategy (Kuratko, et al., 2001). In short, a strategy attempts to capture where

the firm wants to go and how it plans to get there. Entrepreneurship can greatly

enhance the possibility of firm success (Kuratko and Audretsch, 2009).

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Again, SE should be differentiated from corporate entrepreneurship, where the latter

places less emphasis on advantage-seeking behaviors. A strategic entrepreneurship

mindset is more comprehensive (featuring strong foci on both opportunity seeking and

advantage seeking behavior) than a corporate entrepreneurship mindset (featuring a

stronger emphasis on opportunity seeking than advantage seeking behavior) (Ireland

and Webb, 2009). In essence, SE is definitely a process through which resources are

used for both exploration and exploitation purposes. Some also view corporate

entrepreneurship as a set of activities firms use to explore for future core competencies

for continued competitive success (Covin and Kuratko, 2008; Ireland and Webb, 2009).

Historically, when used for these purposes, corporate entrepreneurship may find firms

restructuring their operations as a foundation for organizational renewal. While such

restructuring falls within the domain of corporate entrepreneurship (Sharma and

Chrisman, 1999), the renewal only becomes obvious within organizations as they

engage in strategic entrepreneurship, a process through which resources are used for

both exploration and exploitation purposes.

In short, while corporate venturing (or CE) involves company involvement in the

creation of new businesses, strategic entrepreneurship corresponds to a broader array

of entrepreneurial initiatives that do not necessarily involve new businesses being

added to the firm (Covin and Kuratko, 2008; Meyer, 2009; Kuratko and Audretsch,

2009). All forms of strategic entrepreneurship have one thing in common: they all

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involve the exhibition of organizationally-consequential innovations that are adopted in

the pursuit of competitive advantage (Kuratko and Audretsch, 2009).

Value creation in SE is not limited to financial value; rather, SE is better defined as a

construct that teaches us how firms create value (financial or otherwise). Short, et al.

(2013) called for scholars to explore SE in the context of social entrepreneurship, where

the value firms seek is often not necessarily monetary. Hitt, et al. (2011) included

societal value as an output in their conceptualization of SE, suggesting that the value

derived from successful SE goes far beyond financial gains. Lastly, as per the

definitional analysis earlier, the term “value creation” is popular for some descriptions of

SE. This research posits that this is a better term for what SE is trying to do and/or

describe.

Additionally, one should note that while strategic entrepreneurship incorporates an

entrepreneurial mindset as one of its elements, it is unlike the entrepreneurial

orientation (EO) construct in that EO deals with entrepreneurship as an organizational

culture, rather than entrepreneurship manifesting itself as action or implementation. EO

refers to the strategy-making practices that businesses use to identify and launch

corporate ventures (i.e. new venture creation; corporate venturing), representing a

frame of mind and a perspective about entrepreneurship that are reflected in a firm’s

ongoing processes and corporate culture (Lumpkin and Dess, 1996; Dess and

Lumpkin, 2005). Strategic entrepreneurship does not only deal with “new venture

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creation.” In fact, EO seems closer in spirit to CE, as per Sharma and Chrisman

(1999)’s definition. However, EO is clearly an antecedent of two components of SE (as

per Ireland, et al., 2003’s definition) – entrepreneurial mindset and entrepreneurial

culture.

Levels of Analysis

Strategic entrepreneurship transcends different levels of analysis, encompassing

actions of individuals, teams, and firms in an intra or inter-organizational perspective

(Foss and Lyngsie, 2011) and applies to both small and large firms and relates to both

established firms and new ventures (Ireland, et al., 2001; Ireland, et al., 2003; Kyrgidou

and Hughes, 2010; Agarwal, et al., 2010; Hitt, et al., 2011). Ketchen, et al. (2007)

submit that “small and large firms that learn how to integrate strategic entrepreneurship

and collaborative innovation are well positioned to create wealth.” Strategic

entrepreneurship can also be applied in both private and public contexts (Luke and

Verreynne, 2006; Luke, et al., 2011; Klein, et al., 2013). Luke and Verreynne (2006)

firmly posit that the concept of strategic entrepreneurship is not limited to private sector

organizations, as incidences clearly exist within a public sector context.

As Agarwal, et al. (2010) put it, “strategic entrepreneurship, however defined, clearly

relates to initiatives grounded in the search for competitive advantage and leading to

new entry into products, markets, processes, or technological innovations by both

incumbents and new ventures.” Therefore, strategic entrepreneurship deals with how a

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firm’s strategic intent can enable a continuous entrepreneurial opportunity recognition

process while also facilitating the discipline to exploit the right opportunities (as a

strategic, advantage-seeking process). Strategic entrepreneurship also remains firmly

grounded in the resource-based view (RBV) of the firm, emphasizing the importance of

picking the resources in strategic factors markets and building the capabilities required

to support entrepreneurial opportunity-seeking behavior aimed at achieving a

sustainable competitive advantage (Makadok, 2001; Liu, et al., 2010).

While a majority of studies look at large firms (i.e. Luke and Verreynne, 2006; Ketchen,

et al., 2007; Burgelman and Grove, 2007; Luke, et al., 2011), a few other studies have

kicked off the research stream of SE in SMEs and new ventures (i.e. Yan and Hu, 2008;

Patzelt and Shepher, 2009; Obeng, et al., 2012). Shirokova, et al. (2013) even

developed and tested a model of SE based off of Ireland and Webb (2007)’s

conceptualization against Russian SMEs. This study confirmed the existence of SE

activity at SMEs.

Most extant research in the field, however, looks at strategic entrepreneurship at the

firm level of analysis. Schindehutte and Morris (2009) noted this in their

conceptualization of SE and posit that research thus far had been limited by its reliance

on a predominantly firm-level perspective. They call for scholars to treat SE as a

multilevel phenomenon, reflected by the emergence of more complex multi-level

conceptualizations by Hitt, et al. (2011) and Kraus, et al. (2011). The former framework,

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specifically, discusses the outputs of SE as occurring at the individual, organizational,

and societal levels, reflecting Schendel and Hitt (2007)’s suggestion that beyond

benefiting simply the organization itself, strategic entrepreneurship can create advances

from which society can benefit “through new value propositions that better serve the

needs of some segment, or the whole, of society.”

Others have discussed SE at the individual level of analysis, such as Companys and

McMullen (2007) and Levie and Autio (2011). The latter even provided a definition for a

“strategic entrepreneur” based off of Ireland, et al. (2003)’s conceptualization of SE.

Also, some extant research brings SE up into a broader macroeconomic level of

analysis (i.e. Mathews, 2010), whereby the performance of an entire economy (as an

aggregate of many firms) is studied in the context of SE.

The inter-firm level of analysis has also been briefly explored in the field. Burgelman

and Grove (2007) provide a case study analysis that discusses inter-firm and inter-

industry relations, using the SE construct as a backdrop. Dushnitsky and Levie (2010)

also discuss inter-firm relationships in relation to corporate venture capital investment

and strategic entrepreneurship. Both Schulze (2007) and Rosenkopf and Schilling

(2009) discuss introduce network theory to SE as other attempts to study SE at the

inter-firm level of analysis.

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As for the team or intra-firm levels of analysis, extant research has not explored this

area. Hitt, et al. (2011) discuss that this is a possible area of future research for the

field. They suggest that scholars look into where it is possible for individual business

units and departments to excel at both advantage- and opportunity-seeking behaviors

within a single organization (Hitt, et al., 2011). Research at this level of analysis could

provide very interesting insight on the nature of intra-firm, inter-departmental, or team

relations within a firm engaging in SE.

Scholars further posit that SE is relevant across the full life cycle of organizations (Hitt,

et al., 2011), although historically, strategic management has largely been associated

with mature organizations and entrepreneurship largely associated with young

ventures. As such, SE implies a long-term view of value creation that results from

simultaneously engaging in opportunity- and advantage-seeking behaviors – a longer-

term view and wider applicability than either domain by itself provides. SE is also very

unlike corporate entrepreneurship in this way, as CE falls only under the purview of

large, incumbent organizations (Sharma and Chrisman, 1999).

Therefore, it is easy to see that strategic entrepreneurship has a lot of research

potential for levels of analysis other than the firm (as it was conceptualized early on),

mainly because the construct’s boundaries reach far wider than strategy or

entrepreneurship alone, or even other constructs such as corporate entrepreneurship.

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What All This Means

Our understanding of SE has evolved since Ketchen, et al. (2007)’s paper with its four

assertions. Now we know that SE involves a balance between exploration and

exploitation behaviors. This balance can lead to long-term value creation – not just

short-term performance gains. This long-term value creation is made possible by

continuous innovations, which allow firms to gain successive competitive advantages. A

combination of incremental and disruptive innovation is key to effective SE. Finally,

effective SE can help firms mitigate the ill-effects of uncertainty and operating in

dynamic environments.

The strategic entrepreneurship is also fundamentally different from corporate

entrepreneurship. While CE is firmly rooted in the domain of entrepreneurship, SE

straddles the domains of entrepreneurship and strategy, integrating knowledge from

both to give a more comprehensive view of how firms create wealth. Additionally, SE

goes beyond financial performance gains and also seeks to describe and prescribe how

firms can achieve values other than financial value. While CE only applies to large,

incumbent firms and is heavily focused on new business creation, SE is applicable to

any type of firm (large or small, incumbent or new venture) and applies to a wider array

of entrepreneurial pursuits. Therefore, the strategic entrepreneurship field has a broader

reach than corporate entrepreneurship ever had and has the potential to provide insight

on value creation in a more far-reaching manner (i.e. different types of firms, firm

contexts, environments, values being created, etc.).

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Lastly, it is valuable to briefly touch on what strategic entrepreneurship is not, as this

section mostly described the construct and what it is and what it does. While this is a

more difficult task, the key to this question lies in the fact that the strategic

entrepreneurship field explicitly seeks to describe how firms create value/wealth.

Strategic entrepreneurship does this by combining knowledge from strategy (i.e.

advantage-seeking) and entrepreneurship (i.e. opportunity-seeking). Thus, SE is not

just one or the other – SE is the combination of both strategic management and

entrepreneurship. As such, any descriptions of the construct must reflect this and any

further research done in the field must also meld these two perspectives in its analyses.

Furthermore, the current descriptions of the field suggest that the field is only trying to

answer questions that pertain to how firms create wealth or value; therefore, questions

where the ultimate dependent variable is not wealth or value creation are not within the

purview of the SE field.

Key Points

Previous attempts to define SE’s boundaries, both as a field and a construct, have not

been comprehensive enough in order to understand SE’s place in management studies.

In a special issue of the Strategic Management Journal (SMJ), Hitt, et al. (2001)

established strategic entrepreneurship as both a field of study and an academic

construct. As a field, SE lies at the intersection of the strategy and entrepreneurship

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domains, integrating knowledge and perspectives of both domains so scholars can

better understand how firms create wealth. The question of how firms create and

sustain a competitive advantage (emerging from the strategic management academic

tradition) while simultaneously identifying and exploiting new opportunities (from the

entrepreneurship academic tradition) is “at the heart” of strategic entrepreneurship

research (Siren, et al., 2012). The strategic entrepreneurship field was officially

legitimized as an academic field of study with the creation of the Strategic

Entrepreneurship Journal in 2007.

As a construct, SE is a distinctive and unique construct through which firms can create

wealth and contributes to the understanding of how firms can create wealth. The

construct combines ideas and concepts from entrepreneurship with ideas and concepts

from strategy to provide a more comprehensive picture (or conceptualization or model)

of firms achieve value creation.

SE is not synonymous with corporate entrepreneurship. First, while SE lies at the

intersection between entrepreneurship and strategy, CE is firmly rooted in the

entrepreneurship domain. Secondly, CE only applies to large, established firms; in

contrast, SE applies to firms of all sizes, ages, and characteristics – large or small,

incumbent or new venture. Thirdly, strategic entrepreneurship corresponds to a broader

array of entrepreneurial initiatives that do not necessarily involve new businesses being

added to the firm, whereas CE is focused on entrepreneurial newness (i.e. new venture

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creation). Overall, it is important to note that firms engaging in SE may also engage in

CE activities – the two are not mutually exclusive.

Furthermore, SE is unlike EO, as the EO concept is simply a precursor to

entrepreneurial mindset, one of four components of SE as outlined by Ireland, et al.

(2003).

Overall, SE addresses a long-term view of value creation that results from

simultaneously engaging in opportunity- and advantage-seeking behaviors – a longer-

term view and wider applicability than either strategy or entrepreneurship domains

provide by themselves. Further, strategic entrepreneurship has research potential for

levels of analysis other than the firm, mainly because the construct’s boundaries reach

far wider than strategy or entrepreneurship alone for explaining value creation, or even

other constructs such as corporate entrepreneurship.

Brief Overview of Current Research

This section will provide an extensive overview of much of the extant literature on

strategic entrepreneurship. Later sections will deal specifically with papers that

introduce different conceptualizations and models of SE. This brief overview will provide

the basis for the discussion on gaps and themes within the literature, as well as

suggested future research directions to advance the field in later sections.

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Currently, much of the work published on advancing the SE field has been done on a

purely theoretical context; only two of the 20 empirical studies included in this literature

review aim to advance the field by providing empirical support for previous

conceptualizations of SE (as well as confirming SE’s existence in a practical context).

Consequently, the relatively young SE field has yet to have a strong empirical

foundation like other constructs and fields similar to it (such as corporate

entrepreneurship).

Currently, many papers discuss strategic entrepreneurship within the context of large,

publicly traded firms, such as Cisco and UPS (Ireland and Webb, 2007) and Raytheon

and Apple (Ketchen et al., 2007; Burgelman and Grove, 2007), as well as within a

public organization context (Luke and Verreynne, 2006; Luke, et al., 2011). Other work

has been done on discussing SE within a family firm context (Webb, et al., 2010;

Lumpkin, et al., 2011) and the knowledge spillover view of SE (KSSE), as coined by

Agarwal, et al. (2007) (Liu, et al., 2010; Agarwal, et al., 2010; Kotha, 2010). Below is an

elaboration of the different topics covered in the field.

With regards to connecting the concept of knowledge spillovers in entrepreneurial

contexts to strategic entrepreneurship, a special issue of SEJ was dedicated to this

topic. Kotha (2010) sensitizes researchers to examine the nuanced and complex

interplay among knowledge generation, knowledge spillovers and spill-ins, and strategic

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entrepreneurship within a specific industry context to explain performance. This paper

examines the impact these spillovers had on opportunity- and advantage-seeking

behaviors (i.e., strategic entrepreneurship) of the leading American incumbents:

Douglas, Lockheed, Boeing, and a new entrant, de Havilland of Great Britain. Liu, et al.

(2010)’s findings provide new insights into the source of the resources and capabilities

required for innovative opportunity seeking behavior for strategic entrepreneurship, with

particular emphasis upon the knowledge embodied in individual returnee entrepreneurs

(Liu, et al., 2010). Agarwal, et al. (2010) attempts to refine the KSSE framework initially

put forward by Agarwal, et al. (2007).

Several papers on SE have emerged from the domains of finance and economics. Two

papers have explored SE through the lens of agency theory (Audretsch, et al., 2009;

Meuleman, et al., 2009). Audretsch, et al. (2009) aim to advance the SE field by

discussing linking the SE construct to agency theory through an empirical study based

on patent ownership. Meuleman, et al. (2009) discusses SE in the context of private

equity-backed buyouts (PE). Wright, et al. (2009) discusses PE and corporate

governance, exploring the topic from a strategic entrepreneurship perspective. Dew, et

al. (2009) discuss the implications of affordable loss for the economics of strategic

entrepreneurship. Dew, et al. (2009) discuss affordable loss and its effect on decision

making and discusses implications to the economics of strategic entrepreneurship.

Dushnitsky annd Lavie (201) discusses strategic entrepreneurship in the context of

corporate venture capital (CVC). This paper advances strategic entrepreneurship

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research by elucidating the tendency of established firms to engage in CVC investment

and by unpacking the complex association between different types of interfirm

relationships that these firms leverage (Dushnitsky and Lavie, 2010). Mathews (2010)

uses the radical subjectivist and disequilibrium framework of Ludwig Lachmann to

provide a foundation in strategic entrepreneurial studies that is focused on economic

concepts such as rents.

Scholars have even introduced the concept of a “strategic entrepreneur” as an

extension of the SE construct (which is more of a firm-level phenomenon) to discuss SE

at the individual level of analysis. Companys and McMullen (2007) talk about strategic

entrepreneurs in the context of the opportunity recognition/exploration process in a

discussion about the nature, discovery, and exploitation of entrepreneurial

opportunities. Levie and Autio (2011) provided a definition for a “strategic entrepreneur”

as per Hitt, et al. (2002)’s definition for SE: those who decide to pursue growth

opportunities through an entrepreneurial venture as an attempt to merge opportunity

pursuit with competitive advantage. In other words, “strategic entrepreneurs”

simultaneously seek opportunity and advantage. Levie and Autio (2011) further posit

that entry into entrepreneurship is a strategic act for individuals who seek an optimal

way to exploit their human, social, and financial capital. This paper also mentions that

KSSE entrepreneurs may be a major subset of strategic entrepreneurs. These concepts

are discussed in the context of business regulatory burdens.

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Burgelman and Grove (2007) developed the idea of a cross-boundary disruptor (XBD)

(defined as a powerful entrepreneurial change agent whose strategic actions materially

affect the equilibrium in an adjacent or neighboring industry) through a case study on

Apple Computer in the music industry and Walmart in the healthcare industry. The XBD

Paradox focuses attention on the failure of strategic entrepreneurship that stems from

being blind to XBD opportunities. This is particularly so in companies strong enough to

mount a XBD attack on another industry, which are rarely aware of the opportunity to do

so. This paper presents a unique contribution by explicitly discussing the failures of SE

and reasons for failures using case studies from well-known companies in different

industries.

Pisano, et al. (2007) adopted a contextual approach to integrate resource-based theory,

organizational learning theory, social capital theory, and strategic entrepreneurship in

order to present a theoretical analysis of the means firms employ to create and exploit

competitive advantages in emerging economies.

Two papers also discussed networks and alliances (a component of both Ireland, et al.

(2001)’s and Hitt, et al., (2011) conceptualizations of SE) in relation to strategic

entrepreneurship. Rosenkopf and Schilling (2009) built a comparative study in 32

industries about the variation in alliance network structures across industries. They

posit that although much research in strategic entrepreneurship has focused on the

consequences of network structure for firm performance, little is known about variation

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in network structure across industries, or about the antecedents of this variation. As

discussant comments, Schulze (2007) discussed how network theory is an important

topics in the fields of both strategy and entrepreneurship and provided some insight in

what has already been done on the topic and what needs to be done within the context

of strategic entrepreneurship.

As noted many times before, many differing descriptions and opinions exist among

scholars as to the nature of strategic entrepreneurship and what constitutes SE activity.

Kuratko and Audretsch, (2009) highlighted many of these differing perspectives on this

emerging concept by interviewing different management scholars in an early attempt to

reconcile some of these perspectives. This paper discusses SE from three

perspectives: strategic management, entrepreneurship, and economic policy.

Additionally, this paper discusses the integration of entrepreneurship with strategy and

the integration of entrepreneurship with leadership as a part of the discussion.

Monsen and Boss (2009) built an empirical study that tests how managers and staff

react to strategic entrepreneurship, concluding that both groups react differently, and

therefore, SE requires a correspondingly customized design philosophy in order to

minimize job stress and increase employee retention. These customized strategic

entrepreneurship systems, in turn, can better maximize wealth/value creation for

organizations, for their managers, and for their staff. This paper’s contribution is unique

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in the field, in that it provides an in-depth discussion and study on the human resources

aspect of SE by testing SE’s impact on job stress and employee retention.

Short, et al. (2009), in an article about research in social entrepreneurship and the state

of the field of social entrepreneurship, recommend that scholars embrace key themes in

strategic entrepreneurship and frame their research using established theories relevant

to strategic entrepreneurship research. Hitt, et al. (2011) used a non-profit program as

an example of how SE can create non-financial value that benefits society.

One paper explicitly discusses strategic entrepreneurship in the context of uncertainty.

Ireland and Webb (2009) (already discussed extensively in previous sections) suggests

that firms can use SE as an effective method for dealing with uncertainty. Dew, et al.

(2009) mentions the construct of uncertainty while discussing affordable loss as part the

paper’s contribution to the understanding of the economics of strategic

entrepreneurship.

Strategic entrepreneurship in family firms has also been a major topic within the

literature (Webb, et al., 2010; Lumpkin, et al., 2011; Kansikas, et al., 2012). Webb, et al.

(2010) provide a framework of strategic entrepreneurship within family-controlled firms,

as discussed earlier. Lumpkin, et al. (2011) explore the intersection between strategic

entrepreneurship and family business, suggesting that the development of strategic

entrepreneurship research has overlapped with growth in family business research and

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is emerging rapidly as a topic critical for value creation and economic strength. It is,

therefore, important to explore the role of strategic entrepreneurship within the context

of family firms. This paper explored two related questions: in what ways does the

influence of family matter to strategic entrepreneurship; and how can strategic

entrepreneurship contribute to understanding and strengthening family firms?”

Kansikas, et al. (2012) investigate how familiness and entrepreneurial leadership are

related to each other in family firms. This paper posits that family firms have a resource

that distinguishes them from non-family firms: familiness, which offers an opportunity for

the creation of competitive advantages. They define familiness as the unique bundle of

resources a particular firm has because of the systems interaction between the family,

its individual members and the business and suggest that familiness is defined

according to the resources available to the) family firm. In essence, this paper views

familiness and entrepreneurial leadership as resources for strategic entrepreneurship.

Two papers use strategic entrepreneurship frameworks to discuss academic

entrepreneurship. As previously mentioned, Patzelt and Shepherd (2009) studied

academic entrepreneurs, while Wright, et al. (2012) combined strategic

entrepreneurship perspectives (namely, Ireland, et al. (2003)’s framework for SE) and

resource orchestration theory we provide an integrated framework that explains the

heterogeneity of growth across different types of university spin-offs (USOs).

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Cunha (2007) discusses entrepreneurial decision-making using Ireland, et al. (2003)’s

model of strategic entrepreneurship as a framework. The four building blocks of

entrepreneurial activity as per this framework were considered in this study:

entrepreneurial mindset, entrepreneurial culture and leadership, strategic management

of resources and application of creativity and development of innovation.

Skuras, et al. (2005) use Hitt, et al. (2001)’s conceptualization of SE to discuss

business growth and development trajectories in lagging and remote areas of Southern

Europe by studying local entrepreneurship.

Some studies also contribute to the field by discussion strategic entrepreneurship in the

context of small and medium enterprises (SMEs). Yan and Hu (2008) applied Ireland, et

al. (2003)’s SE conceptualization in an empirical study about the Taiwan bicycle

industry. Patzelt and Shepherd (2009) discussed SMEs within an academic

entrepreneurship and strategic entrepreneurship concept. Obeng, et al. (2012) discuss

small firm growth models and investigates the determinants of small firm growth in

Ghana using concepts derived from strategic entrepreneurship. This paper presents a

two-pronged contribution to the field by also applying SE to SMEs in a developing

country context. Shirokova, et al. (2012) developed and tested a model of SE based off

of Ireland and Webb (2007)’s model of exploration and exploitation against Russian

SMEs. They tested for SE’s influence on performance and found that exploration,

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exploitation, and SE activities all have positive influence on the performance of the

Russian SMEs tested.

Three studies were focused on state-owned or public enterprise contexts. As previously

discussed extensively, Luke and Verreynne (2006) and Luke, et al. (2011) both

developed and empirically tested models of SE in against state-owned enterprises in

New Zealand. Klein, et al., (2013) contribute to the literature by presenting a theory

paper that studies public organizations with regards to SE (previously relatively

understudied in SE literature) and submit that public organizations are usefully analyzed

as entities that create and capture value in both the private and public sectors. They

submit that public organizations can act entrepreneurially by creating or leveraging

bundles of capabilities, which may then shape subsequent entrepreneurial action (Klein,

et al., 2013).

Finally, Siren, et al. (2012) introduce strategic learning as a mediating factor for SE

between exploration, exploitation, and firm's profit performance. They found that the

impacts of exploration and exploitation strategies on the firm’s profit performance are

fully mediated by the strategic learning process. They suggest that strategic learning is

important for firms operating in dynamic environments.

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Themes in Extant Literature

Some interesting themes emerge from the extant literature reviewed above about SE

and where the SE field has gone in terms of overlaps with other ideas and constructs.

Value Creation

Strategic entrepreneurship literature teaches us that combining entrepreneurial activity

with lessons from strategic management can lead to superior firm performance and

value creation; innovations can be positively managed in a way that maximizes wealth

and value potential for the firm. The question of how firms create wealth is at the heart

of the academic inquiry within the field and is the second critical dimension of SE.

The papers reviewed agree that strategic entrepreneurship leads to wealth or value

creation. As shown in the definitional analysis, different papers used different

descriptions or definitions for SE, but value creation is the second major descriptive

theme among these different definitions. Wealth or value creation is also the ultimate

dependent variable in all the frameworks and conceptualizations for SE in the literature

thus far.

Exploration and Exploitation

Burgelman (1983) proposed the concept of “order and diversity” as an early antecedent

of the concept of opportunity-seeking (exploration) and advantage-seeking (exploitation)

activities. In fact, there are different terms for this dichotomy, which is a fundamental

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characteristic of SE, but they are referring to the same concept. SE was originally

conceptualized around the concept of balancing these two types of activities to achieve

competitive advantages and value creation. Naturally, all other extant literature

emphasizes the importance of achieving the correct balance for firm success, as well as

the difficulty in reaching and maintaining a successful balance between the two

antagonistic sets of activities. The creation of more complex frameworks that

incorporate iteration (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010) and feedback and feedfoward loops

(Hitt, et al., 2011) reflect scholars’ understanding of the complexity of this balance. This

prominent idea within the literature also shows up as the first major descriptive theme of

strategic entrepreneurship found in the definitional analysis. This is the first critical

dimension of SE.

Middle Managers

Ireland and Webb (2007)’s recommendation whereby middle managers would be the

agents of strategic entrepreneurship within an organization is a particularly interesting

idea that emerges from the literature. This is reminiscent of Burgelman (1983)’s work

over two decades earlier, where he suggests middle level managers play a crucial role

in implementing corporate strategic entrepreneurship (an early antecedent of SE)

through their support for autonomous strategic initiatives early on, by combining these

with various capabilities dispersed in the firm's operating system, and by

conceptualizing strategies for new areas of business. By allowing middle level

managers to redefine the strategic context, and by being fast learners, top management

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can make sure that entrepreneurial activities will correspond to their strategic vision,

retroactively.

Of course, Burgelman made his recommendation in the time before the current trends

of organizational de-layering and decentralization became popular. However, Ireland

and Webb (2007)’s recommendation that firms “bring back” the middle manager as the

primary vehicle for balancing exploration and exploitation (i.e. operationalizing firm

strategy) within a firm is especially novel, considering in light of the mass layoffs of

middle-level managers in the late 1980s through the 1990s as part of the trend towards

flatter organizational structures.

Would middle management actually improve or hinder innovation (and consequently,

SE)? Kuratko and Audretsch (2009) raised the question of whether innovation is

expected to come from middle management at all, or some other level of management.

Bureaucracy has the stigma of promoting organizational inertia, which is not conducive

for SE and seems counterintuitive to entrepreneurial initiatives in general. Flatter

organizational structures have enjoyed increased popularity for this reason, as they are

touted for promoting firm responsiveness to external changes.

Further research needs to be done to consider the pros and cons of middle manager

emphasis, as well as on the specifics of how strategic entrepreneurship can and should

be operationalized within a firm.

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Innovation

The most overwhelming common theme with almost all of the literature reviewed is the

sheer importance of innovation as a part of value creation within both the CE and SE

constructs. Ultimately, continuous innovation is the key driver of value creation, in that it

provides the key to building and maintaining a competitive advantage within the

marketplace. A firm’s organizational structure must be conducive towards both

promoting innovation (exploring activities) and managing innovation (exploitation

activities). Innovation greases the wheels for SE, in essence, as without exploring,

opportunity exploitation could not occur. And without opportunity exploitation, a firm

would not be able to gain a succession of competitive advantages (they key to

operating in a dynamic and uncertain environment), and increased firm performance

(i.e. value creation) cannot be realized. Innovation is the fifth critical dimension of SE.

Knowledge Spillover

A good chunk of the literature reviewed specifically deals with the crossover between

strategic entrepreneurships and the concept of knowledge spillovers (i.e. Agarwal, et

al., 2007; Agarwal, et al., 2010; Liu, et al., 2010). A special of issue in SEJ in 2010 was

dedicated to the topic of knowledge spillovers. While initially a tangential research

direction for the SE field, this angle on the SE construct may see much further

development, especially with the development of the KSSE framework connecting the

two concepts by Agarwal, et al. (2007).

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Family Firms

Family firms also seems to be a hot topic in relation to SE, with scholars creating family

firm frameworks based of off Ireland, et al. (2003)’s initial conceptualization of SE. This

is not all too surprising, considering that since the early beginnings of the field, SE is

slated to be a construct applicable to all types of firms. The SE construct gives scholars

a unique construct that allows the concept of entrepreneurship combined with strategy

to be applied to a variety of different firm types. Therefore, similar themes within the

literature and frameworks may emerge for other firm types such as those operating in

heavily regulated industries or non-profits.

Multi-Level Outcomes

As Hitt, et al. (2011) suggest, effective strategic entrepreneurship creates benefits that

can accrue to multiple sets of stakeholders – hence their suggested multilevel

framework. Lumpkin, et al. (2011) also developed a similar framework based off of Hitt,

et al. (2011) that is specific to family firms but incorporates the concept of multilevel

outcomes. The emergence of multilevel analysis within the field opens the doors to

future research on different types of value (i.e. the second critical dimension of SE) that

can be created with effective SE, beyond financial gains at the firm level of analysis.

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Overview and Analysis of Conceptual Frameworks

To preface the next few parts of the discussion, it is important to note that other

constructs have experienced similar conceptual and empirical difficulties to those in the

SE field in their research history. For example, similar difficulties in strategy research

over the measurement of “competitive advantage” and “strategy” are prominent.

Performance remains to be an ill-defined concept to work with in strategic management

research. Performance and competitive advantage are often used synonymously

(Powell, 2001; Peteraf and Barney, 2003; Crook, et al., 2008), even though a

competitive advantage does not always translate to superior performance (Durand,

2002; Crook, et al., 2008). In addition to conceptual issues, there are also noted

empirical difficulties in measuring both competitive advantage (see Ketchen, Hult, and

Slater, 2007; Tang and Liou, 2010) as well as firm performance (see March and Sutton,

1997; Wiggins and Ruefli, 2002), just as these difficulties exist with strategic

entrepreneurship. In fact, scholars are still in the process of defining the boundaries for

many other constructs within strategy and entrepreneurship. Therefore, the current

weaknesses or gaps in the strategic entrepreneurship field are simply another indication

that neither the strategy nor entrepreneurship domains that gave birth to SE have

reached full maturity. The SE field should continue to progress and mature, just like the

strategy and entrepreneurship domains shall continue to progress.

Over the past decade, a few conceptual frameworks and descriptions have emerged for

SE, each new framework attempting to refine previous frameworks by adding more

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detail or redefining the components of SE (Hitt, et al., 2001; Ireland, et al., 2001;

Ireland, et al., 2003; Ireland, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ketchen, et al., 2007;

Agarwal, et al., 2007; Agarwal, et al., 2010; Webb, et al., 2010; Kraus, et al., 2011). Just

as the definition of strategic entrepreneurship was ambiguous and under debate, a

divergence in conceptual frameworks and differences in perspective are apparent (Luke

and Verreynne, 2006). Different papers have described the key components of strategic

entrepreneurship (Ireland, et al, 2003; Ireland and Webb, 2007) and have detailed the

relationship between strategic entrepreneurship and other concepts such as wealth

creation (Hitt et al., 2001; Ireland et al., 2001), collaborative innovation (Ketchen et al.,

2007), knowledge spillovers (Agarwal, et al., 2007; Agarwal, et al., 2010), and

organizational learning (Siren, et al., 2011).

Currently, many papers discuss strategic entrepreneurship within the context of large,

publicly traded firms, such as Cisco and UPS (Ireland and Webb, 2007) and Raytheon

and Apple (Ketchen et al., 2007; Burgelman and Grove, 2007), as well as within a

public organization context (Luke and Verreynne, 2006; Luke, et al., 2011). Other work

has been done on discussing SE within a family firm context (Webb, et al., 2010;

Lumpkin, et al., 2011). Some of these papers introduce context-specific frameworks and

shall be briefly included in this discussion.

Below is a comprehensive analysis of all the conceptual frameworks found in this

literature review for strategic entrepreneurship. This analysis will show how the

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conversation in the field has shifted away from simple, linear models of SE (i.e. Ireland,

et al., 2003) at the field’s inception and towards much more complex conceptualizations

that incorporate concepts such as iteration and feedback mechanisms (i.e. Kyrgidou

and Hughes, 2010) and multiple levels of analysis (i.e. Hitt, et al., 2011). The discussion

below includes an overview of the different frameworks, as well as an analysis of the

contributions of the different frameworks to the field.

Early Conceptualizations and Descriptions

Ireland, et al. (2001) identified six domains at the intersection of entrepreneurial actions

and strategic actions (i.e. an early conceptualization of strategic entrepreneurship):

1. Innovation

2. Networks

3. Internationalization

4. Organizational learning

5. Top management teams and governance

6. Growth

They posit that successfully integrating entrepreneurial and strategic actions in these

six areas improves a firm’s ability to grow and create wealth; in other words, the

successful integration of entrepreneurship and strategic management in these six areas

is effective strategic entrepreneurship. These six areas are claimed to be at the

intersection of entrepreneurial actions and strategic actions.

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The intersection of the strategy and entrepreneurship domains proposed by Ireland, et

al. (2001) soon evolved to become the integration of the two domains by Hitt, et al.

(2001) as the defining nature of the strategic entrepreneurship construct. Hitt, et al.

(2001) subsequently revised the above domains to be:

1. External networks and alliances

2. Resources and organizational learning

3. Innovation

4. Internationalization

Ireland, et al. (2003) extend this previous work by presenting a framework that

reinforces the unique nature of strategic entrepreneurship while progressing the

development of strategic entrepreneurship as a measurable construct (Luke and

Verreynne, 2006). This linear model is the earliest full conceptualization of strategic

entrepreneurship; as such, it is very elementary in nature and treats SE as a linear and

sequential process that alternates between four dimensions (i.e. alternating between

entrepreneurial and strategic activities).

Ireland, et al., (2003) described strategic entrepreneurship (SE) as involving

simultaneous opportunity-seeking and advantage- seeking behaviors and results in

superior firm performance and long-term wealth creation. Secondly, they defined the

four distinctive dimensions of SE. Ireland, et al. (2003) posit that these four components

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(implemented linearly) will help firms achieve a competitive advantage that will

ultimately lead to wealth creation (the ultimate dependent variable for SE). In essence,

they argue that strategic entrepreneurship is a unique, distinctive construct through

which firms were able to create wealth. These four dimensions of strategic

entrepreneurship are:

1. An entrepreneurial mindset

2. An entrepreneurial culture and entrepreneurial leadership

3. The strategic management of resources (i.e. financial capital, human capital,

social capital) and applying creativity

4. Developing innovation

In essence, Ireland, et al. (2003) integrates strategy and entrepreneurship perspectives

to suggest that firms following this linear sequence of four components are, in effect,

strategically entrepreneurial and can create competitive advantages that lead to wealth

creation. They posit that entrepreneurial leadership is linked to the success of all sizes

and types of firms (an early suggestion that all firms can implement SE, echoed in later

research).

All four components put forth here are the critical building blocks of later SE models and

is the basis for more complex frameworks. For example, the importance of the fourth

component of innovation is heavily emphasized in this work and later works (i.e. Ireland

and Webb, 2007; Schindehutte and Morris, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Hitt, et

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al., 2011) as essential for the strategic entrepreneurship process. Furthermore, Ireland,

et al. (2003) builds on earlier entrepreneurship literature on innovation by

acknowledging that firms can engage in two types of innovation: disruptive and

sustaining. They further posit that without SE, firms would concentrate too heavily on

sustaining innovation (exploitation-oriented), rather than seeking to engage in disruptive

innovation. Thus, an integrated commitment to both drives real value creation and

provides the basis for forming and executing competitive advantages.

The above conceptualization remained unchanged and unchallenged for a few years.

More Complex Conceptual Frameworks

In the next few years, the strategic entrepreneurship conceptual framework was refined

and grew in intricacy and depth to reflect the complexity of the construct and the

antagonistic nature of the exploration and exploitation processes central to SE.

Scholars understood that Ireland, et al. (2003)’s linear framework does not quite capture

the complexity of firms balancing both opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking

behaviors – therefore, later descriptions and models aim to give a richer understanding

of the SE process, as well as its effects.

Ireland and Webb (2007) define strategic entrepreneurship as a value-creating

intersection between strategy and entrepreneurship consisting of the following three

elements:

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1. Balancing exploration and exploitation

2. Balancing resources between exploration and exploitation

3. Continuous streams of innovation

They posit that SE is concerned with actions the firm intends to take to exploit the

innovations that result from its efforts to continuously explore for innovation-based

opportunities (i.e., new organizational forms, new products, new processes, etc.). Here,

innovation is re-emphasized as an important driver of value creation, just as in Ireland,

et al. (2003)’s conceptualization. They add that innovation and its exploitation is a firm’s

main source of sustainable competitive advantage (i.e. both today’s and tomorrow’s

competitive advantages) and effective responses to continuous environmental changes.

This paper builds on earlier descriptions by suggesting that the ability to anticipate and

then properly respond to environmental change is one of the important outcomes of

effective SE.

They further posit that successful organizations will use strategic entrepreneurship to

deal with the organizational tension that surfaces as firms try to simultaneously

emphasize today what they already do well (relative to competitors) while exploring for

opportunities to build the foundation for future success. Exploration allows a firm to

benefit from diverse investments, while exploitation allows a firm to benefit from focus –

exploiting a particular opportunity. Thus, superior firm performance will be a function of

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the degree to which firms learn how to combine the best of strategic management and

entrepreneurship.

In an attempt to gain some clarity on the boundaries of the SE construct, as well as its

components, Schindehutte and Morris (2009) used complexity theory as a tool for

assessing the interplay between different components of strategic entrepreneurship. As

a result of their analysis, Schindehutte and Morris (2009) have listed the following

variables of SE as the most essential, echoing some elements from previous lists:

1. Exploration and exploitation

2. Opportunity

3. Innovation (or newness)

4. Micro-macro interaction

5. Dynamics

Schindehutte and Morris (2009) submit that while the notion that organizations can

excel by more successfully integrating strategy and entrepreneurship is intuitively

appealing, the realities of how opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking behaviors

relate to one another are more complex than allowed for in Ireland, et al. (2003)’s

conceptualization of SE. They submit that the issue lies in describing and explaining

phenomena that occur from multiple dynamics. They suggest that there is a danger in

SE becoming too reductionist or overly holistic in examining disparate entities and their

respective behaviors within in a single framework (Schindehutte and Morris, 2009).

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Schindehutte and Morris (2009) also posit that SE research (up to the point at which

their paper was written) is limited by its reliance on a predominantly firm-level

perspective. Thus, they call for scholars to treat SE as a multilevel phenomenon, just as

innovation has been argued to be a multilevel phenomenon (a major component of SE).

They posit that unilevel research greatly limits the impact of SE work, as well as its

ability to explain the impacts of strategic entrepreneurship (in terms of value creation).

This multilevel lens is reminiscent of Schumpeter (1942)’s work on creative destruction,

and also reflects a shift within management studies towards more multilevel analysis

methods (Hitt, et al., 2007) – a shift reflected in one of the next frameworks.

Later Conceptualizations and Descriptions

As the first attempt to provide a richer conceptualization of SE, Kyrgidou and Hughes

(2010) suggest a non-linear, iterative model to fill some suggested gaps in the first

model by Ireland, et al. (2003) and to address the limitations of a linear model. For

example, despite SE being defined as the simultaneous pursuit of opportunity-seeking

and advantage-seeking behaviors (Ireland et al., 2003), the first model is linearly

punctuated between episodes of entrepreneurial and strategic behavior and lacks a

defined feedback loop between the two. In essence, the linearity of the first model hides

the complexity of the balance between two antithetical sets of activities – exploration

and exploitation.

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Additionally, Ireland, et al. (2003)’s model is dependent on the effective deployment of

behaviors (i.e. an entrepreneurial mindset) rather than internal firm conditions that

provide the contextual and structural framework within which these behaviors take

place. Further, uncertain and dynamic environments reduce the resources for

entrepreneurial actions. Thus, Kygridou and Hughes (2010) posit that dynamic

capabilities are critical for activating and sustaining strategic and entrepreneurial

processes and to balance advantage- and opportunity-seeking behaviors. They also

suggest that the linear model does not explicitly describe the “triggers” of SE; they

suggest that “vision” of top management (e.g. a commitment to innovation and

entrepreneurial behavior) could act as the strategic driver of SE within a firm.

Therefore, Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) suggest an improved model that retains the

main structure and sequencing of Ireland et al.’s (2003) stages but adds in iterative

mechanisms and bidirectionality. This model shows SE firms iterating episodes of

opportunity identification, managing resources strategically, and opportunity exploitation

through creating and deploying innovation. Feedforward mechanisms have been added

to the model for exploring activities, while exploiting activities now have iterative

feedback mechanisms. This bidirectionality accounts for the fact that firms need to carry

out these stages in an iterative way to refine decisions and prevent escalation of

commitment. The integration of iterative learning practices into the SE process better

conceptualizes how firms might sustain long-term value creation, as firms should be

managing their resources and activities dynamically (i.e. dynamic capabilities). Lastly,

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the addition of iteration better explains how firms can use SE to gain and enact today’s

and tomorrow’s competitive advantages, as initially suggested (i.e. Ketchen, et al.,

2007; Ireland and Webb, 2007).

Furthermore, they posit that strategic entrepreneurship is composed of six components,

which introduces acceptance of risk as a new component:

1. Opportunity identification

2. Growth

3. Innovation

4. Vision

5. Flexibility

6. Acceptance of risk

Finally, Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) submit that there are two key internal firm

requirements for SE:

1. The organizational architecture within which employees operate, are controlled

by, and rewarded through dictates how they will engage with the process

2. A fundamental tension exists between explorative and exploitative activities –

thus, both require very different structures to work effectively (as also suggested

by Ireland and Webb, 2007). Therefore, the organizational environment should

be “ambidextrous” to allow both processes to work effectively.

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Another one of the latest conceptual frameworks for SE is detailed in Hitt, et al. (2011)’s

paper, which proposes a multilevel input-process-output model as another attempt to

capture the complexity of the SE process and the balance between exploration and

exploitation behaviors, as called for by Schindehutte and Morris (2009). This paper also

agrees with Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) ‘s suggestion that Ireland, et al. (2003)’s

linear model lacks the robustness required to explain the strategic entrepreneurship

construct. Hitt, et al. (2011) submits that there is recent evidence supporting the

assertion that SE is broader in scope, multilevel, and more dynamic than originally

conceptualized. This conceptualization also echoes the importance of firm structure as

highlighted by Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010).

Therefore, Hitt, et al. (2011) has created a more complex model that gives a richer

understanding of the SE construct than a simple linear model would provide. This

conceptualization of SE aims to address the linearity problem of Ireland, et al. (2003)’s

original conceptualization, as well as gaps in Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010)’s framework.

The paper extends the original SE model to incorporate multiple levels of analysis and a

broader domain, integrating environmental influences, explaining how resources are

managed in the process of SE to create value across time, and describing value

creation at multiple levels of analysis (value is not necessarily financial).

The SE model they advance incorporates environmental, organizational, and individual

foci into the dynamic process of simultaneous opportunity- and advantage-seeking

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behaviors. When used effectively, these behaviors create value for societies,

organizations, and individuals. This framework assumes the various causal factors are

interconnected (Hitt, et al., 2011). This model outlines three dimensions: resource/factor

inputs, resource orchestration processes, and outputs. Inputs include environmental

factors, organizational resources, and individual resources. The penultimate output is

creating wealth, while the ultimate outputs are societal benefits, organizational benefits,

and individual benefits. The processes of SE are exploration and exploitation activities.

These processes occur primarily at the firm level, while outputs or outcomes vary

across the different levels described above, resulting in a multilevel framework.

Hitt, et al. (2011 describe the ultimate outcome as achieving competitive success (by

creating value for customers of an established firm) or the creation of a new business.

Over time, both of these outcomes are intended to create value for shreholders. While

creating wealth (i.e. financial wealth) for owners is a primary goal,

owners/entrepreneurs may also achieve other forms of wealth, such as “socioemotional

wealth” and personal happiness (at an individual level). SE can also have societal

benefits (Hitt, et al., 2011). For example, increasing the wealth of owners should

contribute positively to additional economic activity (e.g., job creation, technological

advancement, and economic stability and growth) and thereby benefit society.

To achieve these long-term major outcomes, several interim outcomes are critical, such

as creating new technologies or developing innovations with value-creating potential.

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One interim but critically important outcome is achieving a competitive advantage

(Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009; Hitt, et al., 2011). In fact, long-term

survival is unlikely for a firm that is unable to achieve at least competitive parity (Hitt, et

al, 2011). Innovation often contributes to a competitive advantage (Ireland and Webb,

2007), but there are other activities necessary to achieving such an advantage (e.g.,

strategically managing resources) (Ireland, et al., 2003; Hitt, et al., 2011).

Around the same time as the above multi-level conceptualization was created, Kraus, et

al. (2011) used a developmental configuration approach to identify domains for a new

conceptual model of SE. Just as Schindehutte and Morris (2009) put forward complexity

theory as a tool for better understanding the complex interplay of these variables,

Kraus, et al. (2011) chose a different theoretical lens for the same endeavor – the

configuration approach. The following domains were chosen using this approach:

1. Resources

o Scarce vs. available

2. Capabilities

o Routinized vs. dynamic

3. Strategy

o Aggressive vs. defensive

o Content: niche, differentiation, cost leadership

o Process formalization

4. The entrepreneur/entrepreneurial leadership

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o Visionary vs. day-to-day

o Entrepreneurial mindset

o Entrepreneurial culture

o Entrepreneurial orientation

5. The environment

o Dynamic vs. stable

o Benign vs. harsh

6. The organizational structure

o Organic vs. bureaucratic

Their model combines the SE process model proposed by Ireland et al. (2003), the

domains proposed by Miller (1987) and adapted by Harms et al. (2009). Kraus, et al.

(2011) has mapped these domains along a matrix to reflect the differences in the

situations of the firm along its growth process.

Kraus, et al. (2011) submit that large established firms, SMEs and start-up firms need to

be differentiated according to the situation they operate in, in terms of the general

availability of resources, and in terms of the acquisition of firm-specific resources.

Accordingly, differences need to be distinguished regarding the organizational

structures and capabilities of different types of firms. For example, considerable

differences exist between small, mature firms in stable and specialized niches on the

one hand and young, growth-oriented firms on the other hand. While the former need to

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guard their market positions, incrementally developing their products and technologies,

carefully satisfying their customers’ needs in order to stay in business, young, growth-

oriented firms first have to test their business models, their offerings and their niches

and then shift their focuses towards extending the market niches and increasing market

share. Therefore, several partly counteracting forces are at work in the development

from a small to a large firm in terms of the need for entrepreneurship or the need for

strategic management (i.e. bureaucracy).

These domains are reflective of both the multilevel conceptual model proposed by Hitt,

et al. (2011) with the incorporation of the entrepreneur, as well as discussions on the

importance of organizational structure to be conducive for allowing a firm to engage in

effective strategic entrepreneurship (Ireland and Webb, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes,

2010; Hitt, et al., 2011). The inclusion of environment on the list is reminiscent of Ireland

and Webb (2009)’s work on SE in within the context of uncertainty. Components from

Ireland, et al. (2003)’s original conceptualization have also been included, including

entrepreneurial mindset and culture. Lumpkin and Dess (1996)’s entrepreneurial

orientation has also been included in the list, as an ode to one of the antecedents of the

SE construct. Even Porter (1985)’s iconic work in the field of strategy has been included

in the proposed strategy domain.

Certainly, Kraus, et al. (2011)’s work can be taken as an attempt to amalgamate much

of the discussion over the nature and components of SE previous to the paper being

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written, as well other antecedents in the literature to the SE construct. However, the

paper does not provide a distinct or clear new framework.

Key Points

The first conceptualizations of SE by Ireland, et al. (2001) and Hitt, et al. (2001) were

very simple and simply introduced the concept of strategic entrepreneurship into

organizational studies to meet the need for a construct that address logical intersections

between strategy and entrepreneurship.

Ireland, et al. (2003) developed the first full conceptualization of strategic

entrepreneurship. This linear model has many gaps, addressed by many other later

models and conceptualizations that highlighted these gaps and suggested that strategic

entrepreneurship is a far more complex process than initially proposed. Overall, the

conversation in the field has moved from the simple initial model proposed by Ireland, et

al. (2003) to much more complex conceptualizations in recognition of the need for

models that better capture the broad boundaries of the SE construct in terms of

applicability to many types of firms and a broader set of entrepreneurial initiatives.

These complex models have also been proposed in recognition of the complexities

behind the process of balancing both opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking

behaviors. In essence, recent model provide a richer understanding of what is SE.

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Perhaps the two most important and fully-developed models are Kyrgidou and Hughes

(2010)’s non-linear, iterative model and Hitt, et al. (2011) multi-level conceptualization

that addresses SE at other levels of analysis in addition to the firm. Both of these

models present a much more complete view on the strategic entrepreneurship process,

introducing complexities to the model that reflect the complex balance between

exploration and exploitation that is inherent to SE. For example, Kyrgidou and Hughes

(2010)’s model includes iterative qualities that address the notion that firms must

continuously balance both sets of behaviors. Hitt, et al. (2011) model pushes that notion

further, including not only feedback loops in their proposed model, but also a multi-level

view on SE inputs and outputs. This multilevel view answers Schindehutte and Morris

(2009)’s concern over the limiting nature of a predominantly firm-level view in extant

literature; Hitt, et al. (2011)’s model introduces other levels of analyses (i.e. individual

and societal) to address this concern.

Other Frameworks

The frameworks discussed in this section have been to developed in an attempt to

apply SE to specific contexts; these include the case of knowledge spillovers (Agarwal,

et al., 2007; Agarwal, et al., 2010) and family firms (Webb, et al., 2010). A brief

overview of these frameworks shall be given, although they will not be the focus of the

overall discussion.

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Knowledge Spillover View of Strategic Entrepreneurship (KSSE)

Agarwal, et al. (2007) developed the knowledge spillover view of strategic

entrepreneurship (KSSE) and a corresponding framework that emerges from the

knowledge-based view of the firm, which argues that competitive heterogeneity is

caused by the creation and application of privately held, tacit knowledge. This view puts

forward the notion that value creation in a firm is a function of its ability to create new

knowledge and exploit it in the market. Agarwal, et al. (2007) identify KSSE as the “key

mechanism behind the process of creative construction (a concept that emerges from

the Schumpeterian concept of creative destruction), where the growth of entrants is not

necessarily at the expense of the incumbent.

The concept of KSSE emerges from the link between the endogenous creation of

opportunities to new firm formation from the intersection of entrepreneurship and

knowledge spillovers (Audretsch and Keilbach, 2007; Agarwal, et al., 2007; Agarwal, et

al., 2010). Agarwal, et al. (2007) posit that creative construction leads to regional and

industry level growth because spillover benefits from knowledge investment can be

harnessed using strategic entrepreneurship. They link these concepts to strategy

literature by identifying the possibility (in theory) to strategically manage knowledge

spillovers (and spill-ins) to enhance competitiveness. In sum, Agarwal, et al. (2007)

conceptualized an alternative process of creative construction that combines knowledge

from the field of strategic entrepreneurship with knowledge spillover literature.

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Knowledge spillover strategic entrepreneurship (KSSE) is defined as the creation of

entrepreneurial opportunity based on knowledge generated by investments made by

incumbent organizations (Agarwal, et al., 2007). It stems from the symbiotic relationship

between incumbent firms and other organizations and the people they employ in the

knowledge-generation process, since knowledge investments by existing institutions

enable individuals to jointly create new knowledge, some of whose benefits may be

appropriated outside of current organizational structure. KSSE is posited to generate

regional and industry growth due to two endogenous processes: the first relates to the

knowledge investments made by existing organizations, while the second relates to the

entrepreneurial action of individuals embedded in these contexts that result in new

venture formation.

Strategic Entrepreneurship in Family Firms

Webb, et al. (2010) developed a rudimentary framework for strategic entrepreneurship

within family-controlled firms drawing on extant strategic entrepreneurship research.

Research previous to this study had yet to distinguish the role of family involvement in

shaping strategic entrepreneurship (Webb, et al., 2010). Since there are key differences

between family-controlled firms and those firms without family involvement, extant

knowledge about strategic entrepreneurship does not fully reveal the situation

confronted by family-controlled firms (Webb, et al., 2010). In response, Webb, et al.

(2010) have sought to help fill the gap at the intersection of family firms and strategic

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entrepreneurship with a simple model and theoretically tests it against different

dimensions typical of family firms.

The framework they present focuses on three elements taken from Ireland, et al.

(2003)’s original conceptualization of SE that they posit are highly relevant to family

firms. These elements are:

1. Strategic entrepreneurship mindset

2. Balance of exploration and exploitation

3. Continuous innovation

Webb, et al. (2010)’s overall description for the simple framework is as follows.

Strategic entrepreneurship in family-controlled firms begins with an appropriate mindset

among executives. The decisions that are then made with this mindset shape the

exploration and exploitation processes (i.e. firm-level actions). The balance of

exploration and exploitation results in the key outcome: continuous innovation. This

theoretical study tests dimensions of family-business interaction (i.e. family-firm identity,

nepotism, justice, and conflict) against the SE framework put forth by to determine

implications for SE in family-controlled firms.

Family-controlled firms are characterized by a high degree of family ownership,

management, and the intention to maintain family involvement in the firm. Because of

its managerial and ownership influence, the family represents a unique bundle of

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resources (i.e. familiness) that may act as a source of competency or rigidity. Thus,

family control creates unique opportunities and challenges with regards to strategic

entrepreneurship. Webb, et al. (2010) submit that the value created or lost because of

the family’s bundle of resources depends on the nature of interactions within the family

and between the family and business

Lumpkin, et al. (2011) noted that the development of strategic entrepreneurship

research has overlapped with growth in family business research and is emerging

rapidly as a topic critical for value creation and economic strength in an introduction to a

special issue of the SEJ that focuses on SE and family business.

Lumpkin, et al. (2011) takes a similar approach to developing a conceptual framework

as did Hitt, et al. (2011), in that they developed a multilevel input-process-output model.

The authors note that the strategic entrepreneurship process has an input-process-

output nature and especially so in the context of family firms. This model is more

comprehensive than Webb, et al. (2010) for conceptualizing SE in a family firm context.

Inputs in this proposed framework include: individual resources, family resources, and

organizational resources. Processes in this framework include: orchestrating resources,

creating economic value, and creating socioemotional wealth. The outputs of this model

include: individual benefits, family benefits, organizational benefits, and societal

benefits. Lumpkin, et al. (2011) also noted four key contextual dimensions relevant to

SE in family firms: institutional environment/family as an institution; local

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conditions/national culture and geography; ownership regimes/multigenerational

involvement and succession; and temporal considerations/planning horizons and

business life cycles. The framework reinforces that context is an important aspect of

firm survival and success.

Key Points

Work in developing specific frameworks that aim to apply strategic entrepreneurship to

different concepts is evident. Frameworks for both the knowledge spillover view of

strategic entrepreneurship (KSSE) (Agarwal, et al., 2007; Agarwal, et al., 2010) and

strategic entrepreneurship in family firms (Webb, et al., 2010; Lumpkin, et al., 2011)

have been introduced, indicating that both are viable areas for future research. This is

interesting, as a well-established and accepted conceptualization for SE (in general)

has not yet been reached, but specific frameworks have still been developed. It may not

be surprising to see additional frameworks like these for specific contexts pop up in in

the field in the near future.

One specific framework of note is Lumpkin, et al. (2011)’s SE framework for family

firms, as it takes a multilevel approach similar to Hitt, et al. (2011). Although this is only

the second conceptualization to push for a multilevel approach to studying and

conceptualization SE, the emergence of a second multilevel framework indicates that

this approach may actually become a popular one for the SE field.

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Strategic Entrepreneurship’s Limited Empirical History

This section will provide a brief summary and analysis of strategic entrepreneurship’s

limited empirical history as a construct and what that means to the field. Two

empirically-tested frameworks shall be discussed, as well as measures used for SE in

the literature reviewed.

Empirically-Tested Frameworks and Results

Although the empirical history of the strategic entrepreneurship field is extremely

limited, two of the 20 empirical studies included in this literature review aim to refine the

conceptual models of SE by testing them in an applied business setting (Luke and

Verreynne, 2006; Luke, et al., 2011). Luke and Verreynne (2006) and Luke, et al.

(2011) set out to test strategic entrepreneurship in applied business settings

(specifically, in the context of public organizations). Although their findings may not be

global in terms of applicability, the discussion up until this point has been wholly

focused on conceptual frameworks. However, it is valuable to discuss some of the

insights from the limited empirical work done within the SE field. These two studies are

important to include in this analysis, as they provide an empirical basis for some of the

conceptualizations discussed above that have only been theoretically conceptualized

and not yet tested. Additionally, these empirical studies provide evidence for the

existence of strategic entrepreneurship in applied business settings, meaning that SE is

not a concept that is completely divorced from reality or conceived in a vacuum.

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Luke and Verreynne (2006) submit that the inconsistencies in the different

conceptualizations of SE (analyzed above) suggest that the nature of strategic

entrepreneurship is still being uncovered and needs to be understood in a practical

setting – in other words, the theoretical conceptualizations formulated thus far needs to

be put to the test in an applied business setting. In other words, Luke and Verreynne

(2006)’s study emerges from the suggestion that further investigation is required to

develop a better understanding of SE by examining strategic entrepreneurship in

practice to ultimately develop a theoretical framework for SE that is empirically

supported and driven. Given the absence of empirical research on strategic

entrepreneurship and the emphasis on conceptual frameworks within contemporary

studies, a qualitative approach was considered appropriate. As such, Luke and

Verreynne (2006) put together a qualitative empirical study (using case studies of state-

owned enterprises in New Zealand) to come up with a list of empirically-supported

elements of strategic entrepreneurship as a step towards a model of SE for state-owned

enterprises (i.e. organizations in the public sector). However, the primary goal of the

study was to confirm the existence of strategic entrepreneurship as a phenomenon

within these firms.

Therefore, Luke and Verreynne (2006)’s study had two research goals:

Is there evidence of strategic entrepreneurship in state-owned enterprises?

What are the underlying elements that characterize strategic entrepreneurship?

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The results of the study reveal clear support for various elements within existing

strategic entrepreneurship frameworks such as innovation (Hitt et al., 2001) and growth

(Ireland et al., 2001). But, their findings revealed a distinct lack of support for other

elements presented as central to strategic entrepreneurship in earlier

conceptualizations such as internationalization (Hitt et al., 2001) and top management

teams and governance (Ireland et al., 2001). The elements identified also reinforce

several dimensions from previous conceptual studies (Hitt, et al., 2001; Ireland, et al.,

2001; Ireland, et al., 2003).

Additionally, the study establishes strategic entrepreneurship as a specific, observable

construct in an applied business setting. Strong associations between the case data

and SE literature provides practical support for the validity of results, while weak

associations between case data and the literature can point to either a validity problem

with the data analysis or a flaw with current SE theory. (Luke and Verreynne, 2006)

This clarification has provides a basis from which further examination of strategic

entrepreneurship may proceed (Luke and Verreynne, 2006), such as the duplication of

a similar study in a private sector organizational context (as the public sector setting of

this study was a noted weakness of the study). Therefore, based on the results of the

study, Luke and Verreynne (2006) submit that incidences of strategic entrepreneurship

clearly exist within a public sector context and are not limited to private sector contexts

(i.e. the contexts that other extant literature is discussing).

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Six elements of strategic entrepreneurship were supported by all three of the cases

included in the study. These six elements are posited to be empirically-supported

components of strategic entrepreneurship. These components are:

1. Opportunity identification

2. Innovation

3. Acceptance of risk

4. Flexibility

5. Vision

6. Growth

Luke and Verreynne (2006) also reveal six elements that assist in fostering and/or

supporting strategic entrepreneurship by establishing a strategic context for

entrepreneurial activity. These elements include:

1. Strategy-making processes

2. Culture

3. Branding

4. Operational Excellence

5. Cost efficiency

6. Transfer and application of knowledge

They posit that each of these six elements remained central to the project studied and

had effectively assisted each business in establishing a competitive advantage. Of

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course, further empirical studies would have to be conducted to ensure these claims are

far more global in nature and apply to other applied business contexts (other than public

enterprise contexts). Luke and Verreynne (2006) also reinforce the notion of strategic

entrepreneurship as representing the integration of entrepreneurial and strategic

actions, claiming that this is supported in an applied business setting.

Luke, et al. (2011) builds on Luke and Verreynne (2006) by introducing a more

comprehensive model of SE based on a large, qualitative study of state-owned firms in

New Zealand. The paper operates from the notion that strategic entrepreneurship is

entrepreneurial activity directly aligned with and leverages a business’s core

competencies. Luke, et al. (2011) propose a refined conceptual framework of strategic

entrepreneurship based on empirical data, comprised of four key concepts. First, they

define strategic entrepreneurship as “ a distinct process, founded on bringing something

new to the market; a combination of innovation, opportunity identification, and growth.”

They deem this the central entrepreneurial elements. Secondly, they define the

strategic context of SE in four parts:

1. Entrepreneurial activity

2. Applied in the strategic context of business

3. Which develop expertise within their core skills and resources, and

4. Leverage from that by transferring and applying their knowledge of those skills

and resources to new products, services, or markets.

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Third, they posit that the nature of strategic entrepreneurship may take various forms,

ranging from incremental to radical innovations, with deliberate to emergent

approaches. Lastly, they submit that strategic entrepreneurship offers the potential for

financial benefit, subject to managing changes in both internal and external forces (i.e.

external environment). This last point is reminiscent of Ireland and Webb (2009)’s

article about managing uncertainty, where SE is suggested as an effective way to

maintain firm success in dynamic environments.

This study revealed a few interesting findings. First, although Luke, et al. (2011)’s

findings somewhat support the notion that strategic entrepreneurship is associated with

value creation (in this case, wealth), their findings are neither exclusive nor conclusive.

Secondly, although scholars have argued that innovation within strategic

entrepreneurship must be both incremental and radical (Ireland et al., 2003), the

findings do not lend support to this notion; rather the strategic entrepreneurship

activities observed and examined were predominantly incremental in nature, indicating

incremental innovation is a viable pathway for strategic entrepreneurship. The study

also suggests that he nature of strategic entrepreneurship activity is not bound by its

roots and can change from incremental to radical, emergent to deliberate.

While neither of the studies discussed above are particularly groundbreaking in terms of

findings, they represent the humble beginnings of an empirical foundation for the

strategic entrepreneurship field. Perhaps the most important finding above is the

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evidence for strategic entrepreneurship existing within a practical business context.

Therefore, all the previous theoretical conceptualizations of SE (and even the mere

suggestion that such a construct exists and has a practical basis) have merit. Of

course, although the two previous studies have attempted to create an empirically-

supported framework for SE, specific limitations in the scope and resultant conclusions

of these reports highlights the need to further extend the work, and to generate a more

thorough conceptualization for the field.

The Need for an Accepted Measure of Strategic Entrepreneurship

As previously mentioned, the SE field has a limited empirical history and many of the

theoretical conceptualizations and descriptions of the construct still have yet to be

tested, although some have already attempted to test different components (Luke and

Verreynne, 2006; Monsen and Boss, 2009; Luke, et al., 2011). Foss and Lyngsie (2011)

also submit that the lack of direct empirical testing in the SE literature may result from

the tendency to carryover explanatory variables and constructs from the established

entrepreneurship literature. Although such variables and constructs may be accurate

and robust within the entrepreneurship literature (for example, entrepreneurial

orientation or EO), they may not be directly applicable in the analytic focus of strategic

entrepreneurship research. While opportunity discovery is also a critical element of SE,

entrepreneurship constructs and related explanatory variables are unlikely to capture

the continuous aspects of how firms strategically leverage these opportunities (Foss

and Lyngsie, 2011).

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Nevertheless, a few empirical studies borrow accepted measures from entrepreneurial

constructs as a proxy for measuring SE, although again, these empirical studies are

few. They are discussed in greater detail below. In essence, this problem of measures

is not one unique to strategic entrepreneurship alone; rather, other concepts and

constructs within strategic management and other fields have experienced some of the

same problems, hindering the empirical progress of the fields.

Qualitative Studies

As there is yet to be an accepted measure for strategic entrepreneurship, Luke and

Verreynne (2006) and Luke, et al. (2011) carried out qualitative studies in the form of

case studies as the basis of their empirical analysis. A qualitative approach was

considered appropriate given the absence of empirical research on strategic

entrepreneurship and the emphasis on conceptual frameworks within contemporary

studies. Other than these two studies, as a distinct research field SE does not yet

include much robust empirical testing of its main constructs and/or dominant conceptual

models. Even empirical studies relating SE to other concepts (i.e. Kansikas, et al., 2013

and familiness in family firms) have employed qualitative methods. Although SE has

been rather quick to converge on an overall generally accepted theoretical model with

wealth creation as its dependent variable (e.g. Ireland, et al., 2003; Ireland and Webb,

2007; Foss and Lyngsie, 2011), few empirical studies test conceptualized causal

relationships.

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Entrepreneurial Orientation (EO)

Monsen and Boss (2009) used the existing entrepreneurial orientation (EO) scale

originally put forth by Lumpkin and Dess (1996) – a reliable and valid scale used in

many other studies – as a proxy for measuring some aspects of SE. They posit that the

multidimensional concept of EO (e.g., risk taking, innovativeness, proactiveness) most

closely represents these two SE components from Ireland, et al. (2003)’s framework:

1. The strategic management of resources and applying creativity

2. Developing innovation

Monsen and Boss (2009) suggest that given that the strategic entrepreneurship is a

domain in its infancy (Ireland, 2007), scholars need to be creative and innovative in

selecting constructs and measures to empirically investigate the various aspects of their

model of strategic entrepreneurship. They selected the EO scale as the history and

origins of the construct is quite similar to that of SE. Both constructs also have some

similar logic behind them, where EO can be regarded as the degree to which a firm acts

entrepreneurially in terms of innovativeness, risk-taking, and proactivity is related to

dimensions of strategic management (Barringer and Bluedorn, 1999; HItt, et al., 2001;

Monsen and Boss, 2009). Covin and Slevin (1991) proposed a conceptual model of

entrepreneurship as firm behavior similar to Ireland, et al. (2003)’s conceptualization of

SE in which external variables, strategic variables, and internal variables impact a firm’s

entrepreneurial posture and in turn firm performance. Monsen and Boss (2009) posit

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that while this particular application of EO is relatively new (i.e. as a proxy for

measuring SE), the logic is rooted in a long and ongoing research tradition. They treat

EO as a multidimensional construct in their study, assuming it has three dimensions

that can vary independently of one another:

1. Risk taking

2. Innovativeness

3. Proactiveness

Shirokova, et al. (2012) also employed EO as part of a proxy for measuring SE, but

within a larger model that they define for SMEs. This paper defined a model of SE

where the components of SE are exploration and exploitation (both measured).

Exploration is defined as being composed of EO and entrepreneurial values, and

exploitation is defined as investments in internal resources, knowledge-related

resources, organizational learning, developmental changes, and transitional changes.

The components of exploration and exploitation (including EO) described by Shirokova,

et al. (2012) were the independent variables of the study.This paper based their scale

for EO off of Covin and Slevin (1989)’s operationalization of EO. The goal of their study

was to determine whether Russian SMEs can develop SE as a source of competitive

advantage.

Foss and Lyngsie (2011) also discuss how EO has been used as a proxy for SE. They

suggest that EO is an example of a construct that however aligns closely with the focus

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of SE (but also antedates the SE view). They suggest that EO “... refers to the strategy-

making practices that businesses use to identify and launch corporate ventures” (Dess

and Lumpkin, 2005). The clear overlap between the dimensions of EO and SE

illustrates why EO has been one of the favorite empirical constructs in strategic

entrepreneurship research (Foss and Lyngsie, 2011). Foss and Lyngsie (2011) note

that Rauch, et al. (2009) found that the EO construct had been used in more than a

hundred studies and that the relationship between EO and firm performance was robust

across studies and to minor alterations of the measurement scale. However, as

previously mentioned, carrying over explanatory variables and constructs from extant

entrepreneurship literature raises a critical concern regarding whether or not firms’

continuous leveraging of entrepreneurial opportunities is actually being empirically

captured by the explanatory variables (Foss and Lyngsie, 2011). Foss and Lyngsie

submit that accurately testing conceptual SE models would require longitudinal

examination of how firms’ strategic intent affects their ability to transform flashes of

wealth creation, from exploited entrepreneurial opportunities, into sustained competitive

advantage.

Stevenson’s Model of Entrepreneurial Management

Kyrgidou and Petridou (2011) studied the effect of competence exploration and

competence exploitation on strategic entrepreneurship. Recognizing the lack of an

accepted scale for SE, they used Brown, et al. (2001)’s scales that operationalize

Stevenson (1983)’s model of entrepreneurial management as a proxy for SE,

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suggesting that they are akin to the components of SE. This scale contrasts

entrepreneurial with administrative (or strategic, according to Kyrgidou and Petridou

(2011)) behavior. Kyrgidou and Petridou (2011) reorganized these Likert scales to

capture the four components of SE. The original scales had polar ends representing

entrepreneurial behaviour and strategic behaviour, but Ireland, et al. (2003)‘s model

does not specify that a firm is either more entrepreneurial or less strategic on a scale;

rather, it specifies that a firm’s relative expertise at the entrepreneurial and strategic

components of their model is what determines the degree of strategic entrepreneurship.

Therefore, Kyrgidou and Petridou (2011) altered the scales accordingly for their study.

The variables measured include: entrepreneurial mindset, managing resources

strategically, innovation, competitive advantage, competence exploration, and

competence exploitation.

Innovation

Foss and Lyngsie (2011) also discussed the possibility of innovation being used as a

measure for SE – however, they quickly strike down this notion, even though innovation

is perhaps the most examined dimension of entrepreneurial orientation. However, unlike

the extant literature exclusively focusing on firms’ innovativeness and innovative

capabilities (i.e., the innovation literature), innovation by itself does not deem a firm

entrepreneurial (Covin and Miles, 1999; Foss and Lyngsie, 2011). Instead, firms must

engage in both exploration (opportunity-seeking activities) and exploitation (advantage-

seeking activities) in order to create sustained competitive advantage, according to SE.

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Therefore, innovation by itself cannot possibly be a good measure for SE within an

organization.

Key Points

Strategic entrepreneurship, both as a field and as a construct, lacks a solid empirical

foundation. However, two studies (Luke and Verreynne, 2006; Luke, et al., 2011) have

contributed to the field as being the first two studies that have studied strategic

entrepreneurship in an applied business setting. In fact, the first provides an early

empirical confirmation that strategic entrepreneurship is indeed an observable

phenomenon that exists in a practical setting – a major step in advancing the field

empirically. However, both of these studies are limited by two items: they test

conceptualizations primarily based on Ireland, et al. (2003)’s model of SE (a very basic

and linear model), and both studies are conducted in a public organization context.

Nevertheless, the studies represent the humble beginnings of an empirical foundation

for the field. Many more studies that test more complex models of SE (such as those by

Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) or Hitt, et al. (2011)) in other organizational settings are

needed.

Furthermore, no accepted measure of strategic entrepreneurship yet exists. Others

have used proxies such as EO and a scale based on Stevenson’s Model of

Entrepreneurial Management; however, scholars posit that these proxies are

insufficient, as they are unlikely to capture key elements of SE (such as the continuous

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balance of exploration and exploitation). Luke and Verreynne and Luke, et al. (2011)

used qualitative methods to address this issue.

Successful Implementation of Strategic Entrepreneurship

A review of the extant literature on SE reveals key insights as to how firms can

successfully implement strategic entrepreneurship within their organizations, as well as

the various benefits of effective strategic entrepreneurship. Both new ventures and

established firms can and need to be simultaneously entrepreneurial and strategic (Hitt,

et al., 2001); in other words, firms of all sorts should engage in SE in order to secure

long-term value creation. Those firms, large and small, that “learn how to integrate

strategic entrepreneurship and collaborative innovation are well positioned to create

wealth…[because] concentrating on either strategy or entrepreneurship to the exclusion

of the other enhances the probability of firm ineffectiveness or even failure”(Ketchen, et

al., 2007). SE is useful for all organizations, including family-oriented firms (Webb, et

al., 2010) and public organizations (Luke and Verreynne, 2006; Luke, et al., 2011).

Overall, SE can be a tool for firms to remain successful in uncertain and dynamic

competitive environments.

The discussion below outlines some key take-away points from the literature as to what

effective SE within a firm entails and how SE can lead to value creation. Additionally,

Schendel and Hitt (2007) posit that beyond benefiting simply the organization itself,

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strategic entrepreneurship can create advances from which society can benefit “through

new value propositions that better serve the needs of some segment, or the whole, of

society.” However, one should keep in mind that the current descriptions of SE are

nowhere near perfect. Therefore, the discussion below outlines some general features

of effective strategic entrepreneurship, but keep in mind that these claims have not yet

been empirically tested in applied business settings. Future research can validate these

claims.

SE allows those leading and managing firms to simultaneously address the dual

challenges of exploiting current competitive advantages (the purview of strategic

management) while exploring for opportunities (the purview of entrepreneurship) for

which future competitive advantages can be developed and used as the path to value

and value creation. Successful strategic entrepreneurship results from the correct

balance of exploration and exploitation activities, which ultimately leads to value

creation (Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ketchen, et al., 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009; Hitt,

et al., 2011). This balance positions a firm to take advantage of existing and future

opportunities. Continuous innovation (i.e. a stream of newness) is at the core of what

can be achieved with a successful balance between exploration and exploitation

(Ireland and Webb, 2007). Innovation in the form of new products, new processes, and

new markets are drivers of wealth creation. Effective SE can lead to a combination of

both effectiveness and efficiency-oriented forms of newness. Since competitors will

eventually determine how to imitate a firm’s value-creating competitive advantages,

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continuous innovation can be the source of sustained value and wealth creation over

time (Hitt, et al., 2011). Relatively speaking, “successfully using SE challenges large,

established firms to learn how to become more entrepreneurial and challenges smaller

entrepreneurial ventures to learn how to become more strategic” (Hitt, et al., 2011).

Kraus, et al. (2011) suggest that SE promotes strategic agility, flexibility, creativity and

continuous innovation. They also posit that strategic entrepreneurship increases the

number of new start-up firms and enhances the success of start-up firms and SMEs.

Additionally, they suggest that SE is an instrument in transforming administration-

oriented employees into intrapreneurs who exercise entrepreneurial behavior within

their respective organizations (Hitt et al., 2002; Hitt, et al., 2011).

Ireland and Webb (2007) posit that successful organizations shall be the ones in which

strategic entrepreneurship will be used to deal with the organizational tension that

surfaces as firms try to simultaneously emphasize today what they already do well

(relative to competitors) while exploring for opportunities to build the foundation for their

future success. An ability to anticipate and properly respond to environmental change is

one of the important outcomes of effective SE (Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland and

Webb, 2009). With SE, firms rely on innovation and the exploitation of innovation as the

source of sustainable competitive advantages and effective responses to continuous

environmental changes.

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Exploration allows a firm to benefit from diverse investments, while exploitation allows a

firm to benefit from focus (i.e. exploiting a particular opportunity). Exploitation enhances

current levels of performance by incrementally extending the firm’s established

knowledge base, supporting the firm’s exploration efforts. Exploration occurs as the firm

integrates diverse knowledge with existing knowledge stocks (i.e. innovation through

recombination). Absorbing new knowledge to which the firm gains access while

exploring becomes the foundation for future competitive advantages (Ireland and Webb,

2007). In fact, Kyrgidou and Hughes (2011)’s study concluded that both competence

exploration and exploitation positively influence all four components of strategic

entrepreneurship as proposed by Ireland, et al. (2003). Therefore, it is necessary for

firms to master both of these types of activities and to transition between the different

types as necessary in order to achieve long-term growth and value creation.

Balancing entrepreneurship and strategic management can help firms avoid

excessively engaging in risk-taking activities while preventing organizational inertia

caused by iteratively adding to present advantages (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). The

successful balance between opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking activities by

firms can help firms look for future competitive advantages in periods of uncertainty,

while still managing to continue to exploit current competitive advantages.

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It is important to recognize that the right balance between exploration and exploitation

varies across different industries and across different firms. The most effective balance

may be partially dependent on the type of competitive environment in which the firm

competes (Hitt, et al., 2011). Achieving this balance also requires an organizational

structure capable of supporting the twin needs of exploitation and exploration (Hitt, et

al., 2011). The structure of the firm should always reflect an entrepreneurial culture and

should foster and support the continuous search for entrepreneurial opportunities that

can be exploited and enacted as sustainable competitive advantages (Kraus, et al.,

2011). Lastly, a balance must be continuously maintained for a firm to be successful;

SE is a continuous process (the fourth critical dimension).

Given that firms typically seek radical innovations when exploring, exploration activities

are often characterized by long-term outcomes and significant uncertainty that tends to

be associated with technological capabilities, market interest, competition, availability of

raw materials, and so forth (Ireland and Webb, 2009). Therefore, the key to successful

exploration processes is being able to gauge the potential effectiveness of the

resources (Ireland and Webb, 2009) and strategically managing those resources

(Ireland, et al., 2003) while managing uncertainty to mobilize them for SE activities.

Siren, et al. (2012) posit that successful strategic entrepreneurship process also

requires the continuous development, utilization, and even radical renewal of its

resources and capabilities. They describe the importance of organizational strategic

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learning for the SE process, and submits that learning how to acquire, bundle, leverage,

and renew the firm’s strategic resources is critical to achieving a competitive advantage

and creating value (Hitt et al., 2011). This makes sense, as the SE construct emerges

from the resource-based view (RBV) of the firm and emphasizes the strategic

management of resources. They also submit that the importance of learning is

particularly evident for firms operating in dynamic environments, such as the

information technology industry. In these environments, organizations that can convert

information into knowledge and learning will succeed over those that do not (Siren, et

al., 2012).

As Ireland and Webb (2009) put it, “the successful use of strategic entrepreneurship,

however, requires more than a shift in the mindset of the firm’s decision

makers…[i]mplementing strategic entrepreneurship involves corresponding shifts in the

firm’s structure, culture, and operations.” They go on to discuss how the transition

between exploration and exploitation activities within an organization is a vital part of

strategic entrepreneurship (as discussed extensively above). Effective SE should

facilitate the firm’s management of both resources and uncertainty to efficiently and

effectively meet current demands while positioning the firm to successfully meet future

demands. Thus, the entire organization of a strategically entrepreneurial firm differs

from that of reactive firms that choose to only respond to changes in the external

environment (Ireland and Webb, 2009).

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As a final note for this section, Kansikas, et al. (2012) submit that the drivers of

strategic entrepreneurship are entrepreneurial leaders who focus on developing actions

that lead to opportunity-driven decision-making. They describe entrepreneurial leaders

as “…stress-resistant, unselfconscious, assertive, non-experimental in their actions,

conscientious, conformist and competitive.”

Key Points

Successful strategic entrepreneurship centers on striking the right balance between

opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking behaviors. This balance differs across

firms and across industries – there is no one-size-fits-all solution. Successful SE also

requires a comprehensive shift within an organization in order for it to be successful;

shifts in a firm’s structure, culture, and operations are needed to achieve an effective

balance.

Successful implementation of strategic entrepreneurship allows firms to maximize

wealth or value creation – a primary benefit. SE allows those leading and managing

firms to simultaneously address the dual challenges of exploiting current competitive

advantages (the purview of strategic management) while exploring for opportunities (the

purview of entrepreneurship) for which future competitive advantages can be developed

and used as the path to value and wealth creation.

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In essence, because “concentrating on either strategy or entrepreneurship to the

exclusion of the other enhances the probability of firm ineffectiveness or even failure”

(Ketchen et al., 2007), SE involves both entrepreneurship’s opportunity-seeking

behaviors and strategic management’s advantage-seeking behaviors and can useful for

all organizations.

Finally, entrepreneurial leaders are the drivers of effective strategic entrepreneurship.

Challenges of Strategic Entrepreneurship

Successfully using strategic entrepreneurship as a path to enhance firm

competitiveness is challenging (Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009).

Much of the challenge of balancing exploration and exploitation is due to the

antagonistic nature of the two activities, which has been highlighted at the conceptual

level in much of the literature (Schindehutte and Morris 2009). Both small and large

firms face challenges while pursuing strategic entrepreneurship (Ketchen, et al., 2007).

Because both the exploration for future sources of competitive advantage and the

exploitation of existing sources of competitive advantage draw upon firms’ limited

stocks of resources, decision makers face a tension concerning how to balance their

firm’s current and future needs (Ireland and Webb, 2009). Given the suggested

importance of strategic entrepreneurship, it is critical for firms to learn how to effectively

transition from exploration to exploitation processes (Ireland and Webb, 2009).

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Kyrgidou and Petridou (2011) also note that the tendency of competence exploitation to

crowd out competence exploration risks compromising the entrepreneurial components

of strategic entrepreneurship. Equally, the effect of competence exploration and its

tendency towards discovery, experimentation, and radical change might inhibit a firm

from capitalizing on its current resources and advantages in increasingly optimal ways.

Also, managers tend to invest more resources into competence exploitation than

competence exploration since the latter’s benefits are distant and uncertain. This bias

can create a dysfunctional emphasis on one set of activities over another that becomes

self-reinforcing over time. Under this condition, the balance between entrepreneurial

and strategic activity may shift, disrupting strategic entrepreneurship.

Tushman and O’Reilly (1996) specify that competence exploration and exploitation

generate differing behavioral and structural demands (and accompanying investment

requirements), which creates dysfunction that compromises organizational endeavors.

By extension, this tension may cause competence exploitation to disrupt the

entrepreneurship components of strategic entrepreneurship and competence

exploration to disrupt its strategy components, in theory (Kyrgidou and Petridou, 2011).

The entrepreneurial components of strategic entrepreneurship require flexibility and

novelty, while the strategic management components seek stability and predictability

(Hitt, et al., 2011). Achieving this balance is challenging because firms have finite

resources, meaning that trade-offs often must be made regarding the amount of

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resources allocated to exploiting current competitive advantages and those allocated to

exploring for opportunities and new sources of advantage for the future. Therefore, an

organizational structure capable of supporting the twin needs of exploitation and

exploration is required (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Hitt, et al., 2011).

Additionally, while SE seems to be a promising source of finding, creating, and

maintaining sustainable competitive advantages, the complexity of the individual sets of

actions, as well as the actions taken to transition from exploration to exploitation (and

vice versa) poses significant challenges (Ireland and Webb, 2007). Further, firms use

different processes to explore and to exploit, a fact that complicates efforts to balance

exploration- and exploitation- oriented behaviors (Ireland and Webb, 2009). The

exploration process involves the set of activities through which firms seek to recognize

new ideas and opportunities that serve as the foundation for future sources of

competitive advantage. While Ireland, et al. (2003)’s initial linear conceptualization of

SE did not reflect the complexities of SE and its individual components, later and richer

conceptualizations since then to capture the complexities and nuances of the strategic

entrepreneurship process (i.e. Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Hitt, et al., 2011; Kraus, et

al., 2011).

Although a combination of both behaviors is required to achieve maximum results and

value creation (Ireland, et al., 2001; HItt, et al., 2001; Ireland, et al., 2003; Ireland and

Webb, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009; Hitt, et al., 2011), SE poses different challenges

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for different firms of different sizes or in different stages of their life cycle (Ketchen, et

al., 2007; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). For example, new venture firms find it difficult to

obtain and manage resources strategically to establish and sustain a competitive

advantage (Ireland, et al., 2003). In the initial stages of venture creation and launch,

entrepreneurs often have to do more with less and use what abilities and resources

they have at their disposal with a minimum of capital and a maximum of ingenuity and

improvisation (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). Additionally, while small firms’ opportunity-

seeking skills may be strong, their limited knowledge stocks and lack of market power

inhibit their ability to enact the competitive advantages necessary to appropriate value

from opportunities the firms choose to pursue (Ketchen et al., 2007). Entrepreneurial

ventures (of any size) are characterized by high degrees of uncertainty because of the

emphasis on innovation and entrepreneurial outmaneuvering. Therefore, managers

must simultaneously maximize their ability to recognize and pursue new business

opportunities while minimizing the strategic risk related to venture development by

improving the formation, management, and leverage of temporary competitive

advantages (Ireland et al., 2001; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010) – a problem of creating

and sustaining SE. In essence, new ventures are more likely to be flexible and

entrepreneurial, but less likely to have the needed resources and capabilities to build

competitive advantages.

Established mid-to-large firms face very different conditions (Ireland, et al., 2003;

Ketchen, et al., 2007; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). Large firms are skilled at

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establishing competitive advantages, but their heavy emphasis on the efficiency of their

existing businesses often undermines their ability to continuously explore for additional

opportunities. Therefore, it is difficult for established firms with competitive advantages

to continue to seek and exploit entrepreneurial opportunities (Kyrgidou and Hughes,

2010). Although their resource base is greater, their entrepreneurial capacity for

innovativeness and risk-taking are constrained by structures, systems and processes

set-up over time to formalize their operations towards achieving efficiency and

effectiveness (Mintzberg, 1979; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). Still, established and

larger sized firms do have considerably greater knowledge and competence at creating,

shaping and deploying competitive advantages but nevertheless, there exists an

entrepreneurial imperative for firms to innovate and adapt rapidly to change or face

obsolescence and failure (Hitt et al., 2001). Established firms lack the administrative or

other flexibility (Ireland, et al., 2003). For example, some opportunities might

cannibalize the sales of existing products and services. Additionally, established firms

risk losing market to a disruptive innovation introduced by a smaller entrepreneurial firm

(Ireland, et al., 2003). Competitive advantages are temporary, and firms must

continuously explore new opportunities over and above merely exploiting its resource

advantages over other firms, which explains why small firms and new entrants can

outmaneuver larger market incumbents (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). On the other

hand, smaller firms need to establish a market foothold before an established

competitor takes market share by introducing substitute products. Nevertheless, SE is

relevant across the full life cycle of organizations (Hitt, et al., 2011).

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Ketchen, et al. (2007) suggest that collaborative innovation (the pursuit of innovations

across firm boundaries through the sharing of ideas, knowledge, expertise, and

opportunities) can help small and large firms overcome their respective challenges. For

small firms, pursuing entrepreneurship collaboratively allows them to preserve their

creativity and flexibility while mitigating the inherent liabilities of smallness. For large

firms, collaborative innovation permits them to exploit their advantage-creating skills

while concurrently exploring for opportunities outside their current domain.

Ireland and Webb (2007) claim that, to date, few of today’s firms have been able to

achieve an entrepreneurially-effective balance between exploration and exploitation.

The desired balance between exploration and exploitation also differs among firms

because each firm has a unique mix of resources and capabilities. They offer the

following advice to managers to help offset the challenge of implementing strategic

entrepreneurship. Managers can take three key actions to positively contribute to help

firms achieve a better balance between exploration and exploitation:

1. Understanding the exploration and exploitation balance

o By no means does this firms should try to achieve a 50/50 balance in terms

of resource allocation; rather the balance is dependent on how dynamic the

external environment is in which a firm operates

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2. Identifying the optimal balance

o Analyses of the firm’s external and internal environments are required to find

the optimal balance

o Firm strengths and weaknesses

o Environmental opportunities and threats

3. Reintroducing the middle-level manager, who play two vital roles in SE

o First, these managers bridge the gap between operational- and strategic-

level managers. Because of this, middle-level managers are instrumental in

how a firm’s strategy becomes operationalized, as well as in keeping top

management teams aware of opportunities identified in lower organizational

levels.

o Second, middle-level managers are ideally positioned to separate the

operationally, structurally, and culturally different processes of exploration

and exploitation

Ireland and Webb (2007) noted that in spite of the benefits of strategic

entrepreneurship, firms may find balancing exploration and exploitation to be difficult for

several reasons. First, although exploration contributes to strategic flexibility (a skill

through which the firm is able to acquire and subsequently use information to

appropriately respond to change) (Hitt, et al., 2011), the outcomes of investments made

in the firm’s exploratory capabilities are uncertain. Because some stakeholders often

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are uncertainty avoiders, exploratory actions may lack appeal, due to their experimental

nature and the lack of certainty that positive outcomes will accrue from them.

Employees (another stakeholder group) may find exploratory actions to be difficult and

undesirable, as exploration typically calls for employees to use novel routines to

complete their work instead of continuing to use familiar patterns of organizational

action. In other words, employees may be more comfortable with the known, rather than

the unknown. Therefore, exploitation, which takes place by exercising familiar

organizational routines, is preferred at the expense of exploration, which takes place by

exercising unfamiliar routines (March, 1991; Ireland and Webb, 2007). Some

organizational observers label this a condition in which exploitation tends to drive out

exploration (Ireland and Webb, 2007).

The fragility of the process used to transition from exploration to exploitation is a second

reason companies find developing an appropriate balance between the two types of

actions to be difficult (Ireland and Webb, 2007). Operational, structural, and cultural

changes must take place for a firm to transition from exploring for new opportunities for

future successes to exploiting current competitive advantages as the source of today’s

competitive success (Ireland and Webb, 2007). Part of the challenge is the differences

in the operational, structural, and cultural attributes associated with exploration and

exploitation activities (Ireland and Webb, 2009). Thus, when transitioning, the firm

moves from a concentration on diversity with the intent of creating newness (i.e.,

seeking new opportunities, new market space, and new advantages) to a concentration

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on successfully using current skills and routines as the source of today’s advantages

(i.e. exploitation) (Ireland and Webb, 2007; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). The transition

process challenges a firm as organizational changes reintroduce liabilities of newness,

and the process is often time-consuming and can be resource-draining (Ireland and

Webb, 2009).

Finally, Ireland and Web (2009) provide some guidelines as to how firms should

manage the transition between exploration and exploitation in dynamic and uncertain

environments. They posit that firms in all types of industries face uncertainty created by

highly dynamic environments, and what constitutes an efficient and effective balance

between exploitation and exploration depends on factors such as the level of

dynamism, the market cycle, and the firm’s strengths and weaknesses. The five key

tools that they suggest to help firms overcome the challenges in transitioning are:

1. Forming and transforming teams

2. Setting expectations

3. Establishing a clear timeline with milestones

4. Developing contingency plans

5. Justifying changes

Although this list is helpful as a first stab at the problem, more research needs to be

done in determining the most effective methods for mitigating the challenges associated

with transitioning from opportunity-seeking to advantage-seeking activities (and vice

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versa). Empirical support for some of these suggestions would further develop this area

of research.

Key Points

The biggest challenge firms face in implementing SE is achieving the right balance

between exploration and exploitation activities. Finding the right balance is such a

challenge because of the inherent antagonistic nature of the two sets of activities. The

transitioning process between exploration and exploitation is also fragile, as both

activities have different cultural, structural, and operational requirements.

Both large, incumbent firms and small, new venture firms face different sets of

challenges regarding this balance. In general, larger firms tend to be stronger at

advantage-seeking activities (i.e. enacting competitive advantages) and smaller firms’

strengths lie with opportunity-seeking activities. Overall, however, competence

exploitation tends to crowd out competence exploration within firms.

While more research is needed to understand what can be done to achieve the right

balance and to mitigate the challenges of strategic entrepreneurship, scholars have

identified a few methods to help firms through the challenges. For example, Ireland and

Webb (2007) have suggested reintroducing the middle manager as the ideal agent to

help operationalizing SE within organizations. Ketchen, et al. (2007), for example,

suggest that collaborative innovation can help combat some of the challenges of SE for

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both small and large firms. Future research should investigate the effectiveness of

these suggested strategies.

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THE FIVE DIMENSIONS OF STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP

Although scholars have been discussing an intersection between strategic management

and entrepreneurship for decades, work on strategic entrepreneurship only began in

2001 (Hitt, et al., 2001; Ireland, et al., 2001). Creating value and wealth are at the heart

of both strategic management and entrepreneurship, although each domain seeks to

address this topic in different ways. Strategic entrepreneurship is based on the following

primary question: how do firms create and sustain a competitive advantage while

simultaneously identifying and exploiting new opportunities (Hitt, et al., 2011)? SE

theory posits that access to resources and capabilities is important in effectively

increasing performance, and especially value creation through growth (Ireland, et al.,

2003; Meuleman, et al., 2009).

As corporate entrepreneurship before it (Sharma & Chrisman, 1999), the exact nature

of strategic entrepreneurship remains unknown, even though several scholars have

already developed initial models of SE in an attempt to describe its exact nature

(Ireland, et al., 2003; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Luke, et al., 2011; Hitt, et al., 2011).

As it is based on a symbiotic relationship between strategic management and

entrepreneurship (Ireland, 2007), strategic entrepreneurship has been described as the

activities through which firms ‘‘simultaneously exploit today’s competitive advantages

while exploring for the innovations that will be the foundation for tomorrow’s competitive

advantages’’ (Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009). Other scholars have

also offered their own definitions for strategic entrepreneurship; therefore, an analysis

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and clarification of the definition and critical dimensions of SE is the first step needed in

order to establish the boundaries of the construct. As Schindehutte and Morris (2009)

put it, “what lies at the interface of strategy and entrepreneurship is not a simple fusion.”

Table 1 lists papers from the literature search results that either introduce or refine the

strategic entrepreneurship conceptual framework by providing their own definitions or

views on the nature of SE. Only unique definitions from the 47 papers in the literature

results were included, as repetitive definitions offer no additional value. From this list, a

discussion of the commonalities and differences of different definitions will be offered.

From this analysis, a list of five critical dimensions of strategic entrepreneurship has

been determined. This discussion is offered a major step in reaching a definitive

definition of strategic entrepreneurship, as well as determining the boundaries of the

field and construct. See Appendix B for a full list of definitions and descriptions found in

the literature search. Table 1 includes some selected definitions and descriptions for

this discussion.

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Table 1. Selected Definitions and Descriptions of Strategic Entrepreneurship AUTHOR JOURNAL DEFINITIONS CODING Ireland,

Hitt, and

Sirmon

(2003)

Journal of

Management

Strategic entrepreneurship (SE) involves

simultaneous opportunity-seeking and advantage-

seeking behaviors and results in superior firm

performance and long-term wealth creation. The

four distinctive dimensions of SE are: an

entrepreneurial mind- set, an entrepreneurial

culture and entrepreneurial leadership, the

strategic management of resources and applying

creativity and developing innovation.

1, 2, 3, 5

Ireland

and

Webb

(2007)

Business

Horizons

Strategic entrepreneurship is a value-creating

intersection between strategy and

entrepreneurship, balancing exploration and

exploitation of opportunity; balancing resources

between exploration and exploitation; and

maintaining continuous streams of innovation.

Thus, SE is concerned with actions the firm

intends to take to exploit the innovations that result

from its efforts to continuously explore for

innovation-based opportunities (i.e., new

organizational forms, new products, new

processes, etc.).

1, 2, 3, 4, 5

Strategic entrepreneurship (SE) is a term used to

capture firms’ efforts to simultaneously exploit

today’s competitive advantages while exploring for

the innovations that will be the foundation for

tomorrow’s competitive advantages.

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AUTHOR JOURNAL DEFINITIONS CODING Kyrgidou

and

Hughes

(2009)

European

Business

Review

SE can be defined as a process that facilitates firm

efforts to identify opportunities with the highest

potential to lead to value creation, through the

entrepreneurial component and then to exploit

them through measured strategic actions, based

on their resource base. The entrepreneurial aspect

contributes to the ability of identifying opportunities

and to the willingness of firms to pursue new

opportunities, whilst the strategic perspective

enables them to isolate and exploit those

opportunities most likely to lead to sustainable

competitive advantage and subsequent means by

which to form advantage.

1, 2, 3

Content Analysis and Coding Method

Of the 47 papers analyzed, 14 papers offered unique definitions and descriptions for

strategic entrepreneurship. These 14 definitions were tabulated, and a content analysis

for the results was conducted. An additional definition (for a total of 15) was added from

Hitt, et al. (2002)’s academic book on strategic entrepreneurship, as this book was an

early attempt to define the SE construct.

Each definition and description contains different elements or components. The interim

goal of this analysis was to assess commonalities between the definitions. These

different elements were manually noted. Certain elements were found to be common to

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several definitions. These elements were then coded, and through a manual, iterative

method, these coded elements were checked for against all 15 definitions. A list of five

elements was eventually chosen as the most common themes among the definitions.

This paper posits that these five elements are the five dimensions of strategic

entrepreneurship. Results of the analysis are elaborated on below.

Both Table 1 and Appendix B have a column showing the coding of the different

dimensions to demonstrate the commonalities between the definitions.

The Dimensions

As Agarwal, et al. (2010) put it, “strategic entrepreneurship, however defined, clearly

relates to initiatives grounded in the search for competitive advantage and leading to

new entry into products, markets, processes, or technological innovations by both

incumbents and new ventures.” Furthermore, SE clearly implies a successful balance of

opportunity and advantage seeking behaviors (Kyrgidou and Petridou, 2011) –

successful strategic entrepreneurship is discussed further in a later section. Hitt, et al.

(2001) initially defined strategic entrepreneurship as entrepreneurial action with a

strategic perspective, resulting from the integration of entrepreneurship and strategic

management knowledge. Ireland, et al. (2001) posit that the successful integration of

entrepreneurial and strategic actions improves a firm’s ability to grow and create wealth.

Hitt, et al. (2002) elaborates by positing that integrating entrepreneurial and strategic

actions is necessary for firms to create maximum wealth. Strategic entrepreneurship

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also addresses how firms should combine and synthesize opportunity-seeking and

advantage-seeking behaviors (Ketchen, et al., 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland

and Webb; 2009; Monsen and Boss, 2009).

Therefore, a few common themes emerge from definitions within the literature. These

five themes are required for any definition of SE to correctly describe the construct and

the nature of SE activity. Therefore, these themes form the basis for the five critical

dimensions of strategic entrepreneurship.

The five critical dimensions of strategic entrepreneurship are:

1. A balance between exploration (i.e. opportunity-seeking behaviors) and

exploitation (i.e. advantage-seeking behaviors), where the former emerges from

entrepreneurship and the latter emerges from strategy (coded as 1)

2. Wealth creation, value creation, or superior performance (coded as 2)

3. Balancing short-term success with a long-term perspective (coded as 3)

4. The continuous nature of strategically entrepreneurial activity and innovation

(coded as 4)

5. Emphasis on innovation (coded as 5)

The first dimension common among these definitions is the mention of opportunity-

seeking and advantage-seeking behaviors (or exploration and exploitation,

respectively). These components of the definition reflect strategic entrepreneurship’s

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inherent nature as being representative of the intersection between strategic

management (advantage-seeking behaviors or exploitation) and entrepreneurship

(opportunity-seeking behaviors or exploration). In fact, the balance between these two

almost antithetical behaviors is a major challenge of SE (Ireland and Webb, 2007;

Schindehutte and Morris, 2009; Kyrgidou and Petridou, 2011), as well as an important

topic of academic discussion among SE scholars. Nevertheless, these behaviors are

key components of SE. As Hitt, et al. (2002) put it, “entrepreneurial and strategic actions

are complementary, not interchangeable.” In other words, SE involves taking

entrepreneurial actions with a strategic management orientation, where both

perspectives are necessary for value creation; neither is sufficient on its own. In

essence, the defining characteristic of SE is “a sustained attempt to link opportunity-

seeking with advantage-seeking” (Foss and Lyngsie, 2011). This balance also implies

that there is a connection between SE and organizational flexibility, a concept similar to

organizational ambidexterity, where organizations must be adaptive to changes in the

environment (Raisch and Birkinshaw, 2008).

The second dimension deals with the notions of wealth creation, value creation, and

superior performance. As previously mentioned, strategic entrepreneurship aims to

broaden our understanding of how firms create wealth (Hitt, et al., 2001). The term

“value creation” encompasses the meaning of wealth creation, but also allows for

flexibility in terms of what the organization deems as a value. This opens the doors for

allowing SE to applied in organizational contexts (such as public enterprises, social

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enterprises, or not-for-profits) where wealth creation is not the primary value being

created by the organization. As Hitt, et al. (2011) suggest, effective strategic

entrepreneurship creates benefits that can accrue to multiple sets of stakeholders.

Therefore, in these cases, increased wealth creation is not the measure of superior

long-term performance; rather, measures such as social values take the place of wealth

when measuring firm performance. Thus, “value creation” is a much better phrase to

describe and capture the potential of SE across different kinds of organizations – which

is the original spirit of the construct (in that it can be applied to organizations large or

small, public or private, and even social organizations). In short, “value creation” is a

critical dimension of strategic entrepreneurship and is a term that includes wealth

creation and superior performance, but also other non-financial value that can be

created by a firm.

The third dimension is an emphasis on a long-term perspective on value creation, while

still managing to create short-term success. Kuratko and Audretsch (2009) submit that

SE “starts when the entrepreneur is less concerned with issues linked to short-term

survival and more with those related to long-term success.” Furthermore, strategic

entrepreneurship literature firmly suggests that a firm’s strategic intent must be to

continuously discover and exploit entrepreneurial opportunities, in order to continuously

create competitive advantages that lead to maximum value creation (Kuratko and

Audretsch, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Hitt, et al., 2011; Foss and Lyngsie,

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2011). This continuous creation of competitive advantages can only be achieved if the

firm maintains a long-term view on success.

The fourth dimension describes the continuous nature of SE activity (Hitt, et al., 2002;

Ireland, et al., 2003; Ketchen, et al., 2007; Kuratko and Audretsch, 2009; Hitt, et al.,

2011), in that maintaining the balance between opportunity-seeking and advantage-

seeking behaviors (Hitt, et al., 2001; Hitt, et al, 2002; Ireland, et al., 2003), as well as

the balance between maintaining short-term competitive advantages and exploring for

future competitive advantages (Webb, et al., 2010; Hitt, et al., 2011) is indeed a never-

ending process (at least for successful SE). This dimension points to a key difference

between the strategic entrepreneurship construct and corporate entrepreneurship

(elaborated on in the “Boundaries” section), in that SE is a continuous balance or

process, while corporate entrepreneurship implies a specific action has been taken at a

certain point in time (where the end product is always a new venture, product, or

process). Sharma and Chrisman (1999) describe CE as the “creation” of new

organizations or instigating renewal or innovation within an organization, but a

continuous balance or process is not central to the CE construct as it is part of SE.

Agarwal, et al. (2010), for example, describe SE as having a continuous opportunity

recognition process. Further, continuous innovation is positioned as the source of

sustained value creation over time (Hitt, et al., 2011). Thus, the continuous nature of SE

is the fourth critical dimension.

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The fifth and last dimension is the sheer importance of innovation for successful

strategic entrepreneurship. (In this analysis, “recombination of resources” and

“newness” were treated as synonyms for innovation; see Johannessen, et al., 2001).

Many strategic entrepreneurship scholars emphasize the importance of innovation for

value creation (Hitt, et al., 2001; Ireland, et al., 2003; Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ketchen,

et al., 2007; Kuratko and Audretsch, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Luke, et al.,

2011). Hitt, et al. (2001) suggest a strong interrelationship between innovation and

entrepreneurship; an entrepreneurial mindset (i.e. view to innovation) is required for

founding of new businesses and saving old ones. Ireland and Webb (2007) posit that

continuous innovation is “at the core” of what firms can achieve with SE (i.e. the

balance between exploration and exploitation activities). In other words, SE deals with

“actions the firm intends to take to exploit the innovations that result from its efforts to

continuously explore for innovation-based opportunities” (Ireland and Webb, 2007).

Luke, et al. (2011) further submit that innovation within SE may take various forms,

ranging from incremental to radical innovations. Innovation is central to opportunity

recognition (Boone, et al., 2013). If firms employ strong innovative programs to

implement entrepreneurial strategies, they can create wealth. In essence, innovation is

a central theme within the field and a critical dimension of the construct. In essence,

continuous innovation allows for long-term value creation as it allows for firms to remain

technologically ahead of their competitors by continuously building and maintaining

competitive advantages as different opportunities arise in the marketplace.

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As this discussion has shown, all these components are necessary for a full and

complete definition of SE that would differentiate the construct from other seemingly

similar constructs. Each component depends on the other components in order to

provide a complete picture of strategic entrepreneurship and its potential. Not a single

one of these components can be left out. For example, one cannot describe SE as

being the balance of exploration and exploitation activities without describing SE as a

continuous process that leads to long-term value creation. To leave out the latter two

components would be to omit the potential of SE (i.e. value creation now and in the long

term) and its very nature (i.e. a continuous process). But even this description is not

complete without the mention of continuous innovation, as innovation is a major way in

which firms can become strategically entrepreneurial (i.e. the “how”) in order to achieve

long-term value creation. In other words, innovation greases the wheels for SE and

helps firms find the right opportunities, exploit them, and enjoy the benefits of long-term

value creation.

Other Results

While many commonalities exist with most of these definitions, some notable

differences also exist in how authors choose to define or describe SE. Some unique

components within these definitions include:

1. Creativity (Ireland, et al., 2003)

2. Emphasis on resources and resource base (Ireland and Webb, 2007; Kyrgidou

and Hughes, 2010)

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3. Uncertainty (Ireland and Webb, 2009)

4. Description of SE within a broader economic context (Mathews, 2010)

The first idea comes straight out of the entrepreneurship research tradition. Creativity is

an entrepreneurial quality and is part of the third component of Ireland, et al. (2003)’s

early conceptual framework for SE. The concept of creativity was not echoed in other

scholars’ definitions for SE. While creativity is loosely mentioned in some of the extant

literature (Schindehutte and Morris, 2009; Hitt, et al., 2011; Kraus, et al., 2011), it has

never been a focal point of discussion within the field (as corroborated by the

conceptual analysis contained herein).

The second idea reinforces the fact that the SE construct finds its origins in the

resource-based view (RBV) of the firm (Ireland, et al., 2003; Kyrgidou and Hughes,

2010; Liu, et al., 2010), although RBV has fallen out of favor within the field in favor of

the concept of dynamic capabilities (which better reflects the nature of SE – elaborated

on in the conceptual analysis). For example, Schindehutte and Morris (2009) cite RBV

as having serious shortcomings in that it remains largely antithetical to a dynamic,

continuous conception of change over time and perhaps may not be well-suited to

describe SE as innovation (or newness) emerges from dynamic behavior. But the

strategic management of resources is one of the four components of SE that Ireland, et

al. (2003) mentioned in their seminal paper with the first conceptual construct of SE,

suggesting that “the purpose of bundling tangible and intangible resources is to

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organize them in ways that contribute to recognizing and exploiting entrepreneurial

opportunities and lead to the development of competitive advantages.” Nevertheless,

the emphasis on resources, while mentioned in other papers analyzed, has not been

put front in center in many of these definitions. Considering this component’s

underrepresentation in the results of the definitional content analysis, as well as

scholars favoring a more dynamic view of the firm in the context of SE, resources and a

resource base are not a critical dimension of SE.

The third idea emerges from the positioning of the SE construct as a tool to help

organizational decision makers to manage uncertainty in dynamic competitive

environments. Ireland and Webb (2009) describe SE in the context of uncertainty, a

concept with a history in both strategic management and entrepreneurship literature.

However, uncertainty is not a component reflected in other definitions of SE; thus, it is

not a critical dimension of the construct.

Lastly, unlike most other scholars who describe SE at the firm level of analysis,

Mathews (2010) chose to describe SE within a broader economic context and level of

analysis, whereby he credits SE for driving the economy in new directions. While he

presents an interesting application of SE in a different context than generally

researched, the definition he provides is somewhat limiting and inconsistent with the

general direction of the field. Therefore, the economic implications of SE are not a

critical dimension of the construct. However, researching SE within an economic or

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financial context may prove to be a fruitful research direction, as others have also

pursued this research stream (e.g. Audretsch, et al., 2009; Meuleman, et al., 2009).

Key Points

Over strategic entrepreneurship’s short history, scholars have come up with many

differing definitions and descriptions for the construct. Previous studies have not

attempted to reconcile these descriptions into a single definition. After a thorough

content analysis of every unique definition and description for SE, five key themes

emerge that are common to these definitions.

These key themes are posited to be essential to be included in any complete definition

for strategic entrepreneurship, as these themes are at the heart of the construct. As

such, this research posits that these form the basis of the five critical dimensions of

strategic entrepreneurship.

Therefore, the five critical dimensions of strategic entrepreneurship are:

1. A balance between exploration (i.e. opportunity-seeking behaviors) and

exploitation (i.e. advantage-seeking behaviors), where the former emerges from

entrepreneurship and the latter emerges from strategy.

2. Value creation

3. Balancing short-term success with a long-term perspective

4. The continuous nature of strategically entrepreneurial activity

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5. Emphasis on innovation

These five dimensions accurately and adequately describe the construct, as well as

differentiate this construct from other seemingly similar constructs. These critical

dimensions also provide a starting point for the discussion on the boundaries of

strategic entrepreneurship – both as a field and as a construct.

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WHERE DOES STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP FIT?

As previously mentioned throughout this paper, strategic entrepreneurship is the value-

creating integration between strategic management and entrepreneurship research that

lies at the intersections between the two fields (Ireland, et al., 2001; Ireland, et al.,

2003; Ireland and Webb, 2007; Kraus, et al., 2011), unlike corporate entrepreneurship,

which falls firmly within the entrepreneurship domain (See Figure 1). Meyer (2009) (a

self-described contrarian) questioned the meaning of the words “intersection” and

“integration” with regards to defining strategic entrepreneurship; nevertheless, the

Meeks-Meyer Illustration of the Strategic Management and Entrepreneurship Historical

Intersections puts strategic entrepreneurship in the middle intersection of a Venn

diagram between entrepreneurship and strategic management. The illustration included

herein shall show a more process-oriented or dynamic illustration of SE, placing the

field in the middle of the two domains, with arrows demonstrating how SE both borrows

from and contributes to strategy and entrepreneurship.

However, beyond an integration of strategic management and entrepreneurial

perspectives, strategic entrepreneurship also represents a connection between the two

domains. In other words, the strategic entrepreneurship construct connects the

advantage-seeking behaviors of strategy with the opportunity-seeking behaviors of

entrepreneurship into a single model or framework that provides a holistic view of how

firms create value. The arrows in Figure 4 also represent this connection and the

continuous nature of the process of balancing both types of behaviors.

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Figure 4. Where Strategic Entrepreneurship Fits

Strategic entrepreneurship, however, should not be taken as an attempt to combine

entrepreneurship and strategic management into a single discipline, nor does SE imply

that entrepreneurship and strategic management are a single discipline that has been

subdivided (Ireland, et al., 2003). Both entrepreneurship and strategic management

research streams have provided unique and valuable contributions to management

studies (Ireland, et al., 2003). Although their foci differ (strategy is concerned with a

firm’s long-term development and entrepreneurship is concerned with actions taken to

create newness (Ireland, et al., 2003; Ireland and Webb, 2007)), both are inevitably

interrelated and are concerned with value creation (Ireland et al., 2003; Kraus and

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Kauranen, 2009). The two fields are inseparable, as the research results of the one

cannot fully be understood without the other, and in this way, are mutually supportive

(Meyer and Heppard, 2000; Ireland, et al., 2003; Kraus and Kauranen, 2009). In other

words, since the two disciplines are inseparable, it is difficult to understand one field’s

research findings without simultaneously studying the results reported in the other

(Meyer and Heppard, 2000) and combining the perspectives of both to better

understand how firms create wealth. Barney and Arikan (2001) suggested that there is

a close, although not fully specified relationship between theories of competitive

advantage and theories of creativity and entrepreneurship. They posit that

understanding the complementarities between entrepreneurship and strategic

management provides promising research questions on how firms create value.

In sum, strategic entrepreneurship allows for the knowledge from both fields to be

combined into a unique construct (and a unique field of study) with five critical

dimensions that recognizes the logical intersections and overlap between the two

domains. After all, strategic entrepreneurship theory combines the creative exploration

activities (originating from entrepreneurship) with the strategic discipline to exploit the

right opportunities. Nevertheless, the evident intersection between these two research

fields has been largely left uncovered so far (Kraus and Kauranen, 2009), even with the

development of SE as a new field of research and academic inquiry.

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Key Points

Strategic entrepreneurship (characterized by five critical dimensions) firmly lies at the

intersection of strategic management and entrepreneurship. The intersection between

the two fields is the concept of wealth or value creation; thus, the integration of both

entrepreneurial and strategic perspectives within the strategic entrepreneurship field

allows for a richer understanding of how firms create wealth or value. The strategic

entrepreneurship field serves as the connector between the strategy and

entrepreneurship domains.

While the placement of the field is certain in relation to these two domains, the strategic

entrepreneurship field is still very new, and intersections between the two domains have

been largely left uncovered.

Findings

Overall, scholars have firmly moved away from a linear conceptualization of SE

(Ireland, et al., 2003) and towards more complex conceptualizations that emphasize the

iterative (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010) and multilevel (Hitt, et al., 2011) nature of the

strategic entrepreneurship process. While these frameworks have not experienced

extensive empirical testing and analysis, it is clear that scholars are tending towards a

far richer explanation of SE and how firms create value. These richer frameworks also

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capture the notion that balancing exploration and exploitation activities (the first critical

dimension of SE) is an extremely complex matter and finding the right balance may

prove challenging (Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009; Schindehutte and

Morris, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Kyrgidou and Petridou, 2011) (see

“Challenges of Strategic Entrepreneurship” section). In essence, although Ireland, et al.

(2003) provides a very clear and concise initial model for SE, the conversation in the

field seems to be moving towards much more complex frameworks (i.e. Kyrgidou and

Hughes, 2010; Hitt, et al., 2011; Lumpkin, et al., 2011) that use the linear model as a

basis in order to capture the nuanced and complex nature of balancing opportunity-

seeking (exploration) and advantage-seeking (exploitation) activities. After all, this

balance is at the heart of SE and leads to the four other critical dimensions of the

construct.

Most importantly, one should note that Hitt, et al. (2011) and Lumpkin, et al. (2011) both

propose multilevel input-process-output conceptualizations of SE, reflecting the shift

within management studies as a whole towards multilevel frameworks (Hitt, et al.,

2007). In fact, Lumpkin, et al. (2011) cites Hitt, et al. (2011), basing their modelf of SE

for family firms off of Hitt, et al. (2011)’s general conceptualization. Again, more

complex, iterative conceptualizations seem to be more the fashion in the field now, in

contrast to the basic linear framework initially proposed by Ireland, et al. (2003).

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Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) were the first the offer a richer model of SE in a framework

that incorporate iterative qualities as well as feedforward and feedback mechanisms.

They are also the first to propose the importance of dynamic capabilities for SE, shifting

the field’s focus away from its origins in the static RBV of the firm. This paper reinforces

many of the ideas presented by Ireland, et al. (2003) while adding some depth to the

description of SE by aiming to provide a more realistic model that better captures the

complex balance between entrepreneurial and strategic behaviors (the first critical

dimension of SE). They were also the first to suggest the “trigger” of SE within an

organization – vision from top management. They suggest two items would determine

the success of SE in a firm: the internal environment of the firm and the perception of

employees regarding how things are meant to be done. Their model also lends support

to other critical dimensions of SE by confirming that value creation is the ultimate

outcome in their model; describing how SE promotes the balance between short-term

and long-term successes through iterative processes; and suggesting that innovation is

the main driver of value creation.

At first glance, it seems like each paper discusses introduces a completely different list

of domains/components that they posit to be at the heart of strategic entrepreneurship.

While much of these models still need to undergo extensive empirical testing for a more

definite or complete list of domains, many of these conceptualizations in the extant

literature support the identification of the five dimensions of SE in this paper.

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Perhaps the dimension with the most overwhelming amount of support from the

different conceptualizations is for the fifth dimension: innovation. Innovation has been

described as a major component of SE in almost all the frameworks discussed, and has

been empirically tested by Luke, et al. (2011). Innovation (or continuous innovation or

newness) is perhaps the most interesting component discussed by scholars in the field,

as it seems to have gained widespread theoretical support as an essential component

of SE from different conceptualizations, as well as empirical support thus far in the

construct’s history. Innovation is the fifth critical dimension of SE and is the key to

implementing successful strategic entrepreneurship. In essence, scholars seem to

agree that innovation is a fundamental component of the strategic entrepreneurship

process and must be part of the description of the nature of SE. So a conceptualization,

model, or definition of SE is not complete without including this dimension of innovation,

either as a descriptor for how value creation is achieved with SE (in the case of a

definition), or as the driver of value creation in the SE process and its place within that

process (in the case of a model or conceptualization).

The first critical dimension of SE is also overwhelmingly supported by the

conceptualizations analyzed. Ireland and Webb (2007) and Schindehutte and Morris

(2009) both explicitly suggest that the balance between exploration and exploitation

activities is an essential component of SE, and Ireland and Webb (2009) suggest that

the correct balance between the two would help firms mitigate uncertainty. Work by

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Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) and Hitt, et al. (2011), which incorporates iteration and

feedback/feedforward mechanisms in their models, supports this notion of a balance

and provides richer detail on how this balance is achieved and maintained. Therefore,

the balance between opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking behaviors is definitely

a defining feature and a critical dimension of the construct. While this dimension of SE

is the most critical for implementing successful strategic entrepreneurship, it also

proves to be the most challenging for firms. Finding and maintaining the right balance

between the two antagonistic behaviors is no easy task, but one thing is certain – a

continuous balance (fourth dimension) between the two behaviors must be kept for firm

success, both in the short term and the long term (third dimension).

Value creation (sometimes referred to as wealth creation in some conceptualizations),

the second critical dimension, is also a part of all the conceptualizations analyzed as

the ultimate outcome or dependent variable of SE. HItt, et al. (2011)’s multi-level

conceptualization is also the first to describe the outcomes of SE at different levels of

analysis, supporting the notion that SE can create non-financial value in addition to

wealth, providing support for the idea that value creation (not just wealth creation) is a

critical dimension of the construct. Conceptually, the SE field has been quick to

converge on the notion that value or wealth creation is the ultimate dependent variable

of strategic entrepreneurship (Foss and Lyngsie, 2011). They submit, however, that

lower-level causal mechanisms underlying this relationship are not clearly defined and

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operationalized, presenting an opportunity for future research that could also help refine

the SE construct and provide a richer explanation of this dimension.

The conceptual framework overview also revealed other themes within the extant

literature. For example, the importance of organizational structure emerges from the

literature (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Hitt, et al., 2011; Kraus, et al., 2011) as the

“missing piece” of Ireland (2003)’s entrepreneurial mindset and culture as per Kyrgidou

and Hughes (2010). Organizational structure is posited as an internal firm requirement

for SE to occur and allows for the four original components of SE (an entrepreneurial

mindset, an entrepreneurial culture and entrepreneurial leadership, the strategic

management of resources and applying creativity, and developing innovation) to be

possible. Organizational structure is also slated to be the key to achieving an effective

balance between exploration and exploitation, where the structure must be capable of

supporting the needs for both activities. Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) suggest that an

ambidextrous organizational structure would allow a firm to balance both exploration

and exploitation behaviors; however, further research has yet to be done on the ideal

organizational structure (and for different organization types, such as SMEs, new

ventures, or larger organizations) for SE to be as effective as possible (Hitt, et al.,

2011).

Other overlaps include the mention of growth in the domain lists of Ireland, et al (2001)

and Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010). Interestingly enough, the notion of growth as being a

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domain or essential component of SE has not been echoed in any of the other

conceptualizations. Additionally, Luke and Verreynne (2006) posit that growth is an

empirically-supported component of SE. Further research can and should be done to

support or refute this conclusion.

Additionally, other importance of opportunity and opportunity-recognition has been

reflected in a few frameworks (Schindehutte and Morris, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes,

2010) and has some empirical supported as a component of SE (Luke and Verreynne,

2006).

Overall, strategic entrepreneurship’s contribution to the broader domain of management

studies is the potential for a far richer explanation of how firms can create value – a

better explanation than either strategy or entrepreneurship can provide on their own.

Strategy primarily deals with how firms create financial value and enact competitive

advantages; entrepreneurship is wholly concerned with opportunity and opportunity-

recognition, as well as the creation of non-financial value. By combining knowledge and

perspectives from the two, scholars have been able to come up with conceptualizations

that start at the beginning of the opportunity-exploration process, connecting it to the

opportunity-exploitation process, and then ending with the ultimate outcome of value

(financial and non-financial) creation. Of course, this process is continuous and

iterative, with firms balancing both exploration and exploitation activities for maximum

firm performance. Therefore, strategic entrepreneurship’s boundaries are wide enough

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to describe the entire value creation process of firms, giving scholars the freedom to

import knowledge from both strategy and entrepreneurship in their research on this

topic.

Recommendations

The definitional content analysis contributes to the literature by identifying the five

critical dimensions of strategic entrepreneurship. The conceptual overview analysis

shows how descriptions and conceptualizations of SE have increased in complexity,

comprehensiveness, and detail over time, as scholars continuously build on previous

work to provide a fuller conceptual view of strategic entrepreneurship and what it

entails. Further, the conceptual overview analysis provides overwhelming support for

the critical dimensions identified by the definitional content analysis.

The strategic entrepreneurship field, while possessing great potential as an emerging

field, still has many research gaps. Therefore, two recommendations on how to

advance the strategic entrepreneurship field emerge:

1. The creation of a solid empirical foundation in the field that validates the claims

of the extant literature

o Future empirical studies must continue to validate the existence of SE, but

in multiple contexts (i.e. large firms, small firms, new ventures, not-for-

profits, private firms, public firms, social ventures…)

o This includes the creation of a valid and reliable accepted measure for SE

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2. The field must converge on a single, general framework for the strategic

entrepreneurship construct

o Currently, there are a few choices scholars can use in their research,

which can result in fragmented future research

o The field can only advance when a commonly-accepted framework for the

construct is reached

The five dimensions identified in this paper can help advance the field in terms of both

recommendations. First, part of the difficulty in measuring SE is that the dimensions

and critical elements of the construct have not been agreed upon within the field (as

evidenced by the conceptual framework overview). Thus, the identification of the five

critical dimensions of SE within this paper can assist in future empirical studies by

giving scholars five concrete dimensions to measure as a means of reaching an

accepted measure for SE. This will help the field progress empirically, as other

constructs (like EO) are insufficient proxies for SE. These five dimensions provide a

complete description of strategic entrepreneurship; therefore, measuring these

dimensions should provide the basis for a valid measure.

Secondly, the five dimensions identified (resulting from an integration of knowledge and

consensus in extant literature) can be used as a precursor for a convergence of

frameworks into a single, accepted framework for the SE construct. These five

dimensions already represent a convergence of definitions and descriptions; the next

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step would be using findings from the conceptual framework overview to create such a

model. A multilevel approach that integrates iteration, feedback loops, and feedforward

mechanisms is recommended. Multilevel outputs strongly correlates with the concept of

value creation (the second critical dimension). The addition of iteration, feedback

mechanisms, and feedforward mechanisms reflects the consensus among scholars that

these components reflect the complexity behind the balance of exploration and

exploitation (the first critical dimension), as well as the continuous nature of strategic

entrepreneurship (the fourth critical dimension) and the need to balance the short-term

with the long-term (the third critical dimension).

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FUTURE RESEARCH DIRECTIONS

SE is a relatively new field and a new construct, making it a highly viable research area

with many promising research opportunities. Current research directions involving SE

are highly fragmented (as evidenced by the previous section), with just 47 papers using

the term strategic entrepreneurship (or a slight variation of) in their title and/or abstract

(see: Appendix A). While strategic entrepreneurship is posited to apply to organizations

of different sizes and ages (Ireland, et al., 2001; Ireland, et al., 2003; Kyrgidou and

Hughes, 2010; Agarwal, et al., 2010; Hitt, et al., 2011), much of the current research is

focused on larger organizations, although some work on SMEs is evident. Additionally,

research addressing the core construct itself is popular, as many papers aim to refine

the original linear conceptualization for SE as proposed by Ireland, et. al. (2003).

Perhaps the absolute most glaring gap within the field is the lack of a strong empirical

foundation for many of the conceptualizations and frameworks for strategic

entrepreneurship, albeit having a strong theoretical basis for the construct. While the

theoretical conceptualizations for SE have been reworked on more than one occasion

(see: “Overview and Analysis of Conceptual Frameworks”), the empirical foundation for

many of these conceptualizations is lacking. Only two studies (Luke and Verreynne,

2006; Luke, et al., 2011) have aimed to provide an empirically supported and driven

model for the construct (the first, in fact, has provided an empirically-supported

confirmation of the existence of SE in an applied business setting). However, the

emphasis within the field overall remains theoretical, and specific limitations in the

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scope and resultant conclusions of the above empirical studies highlights the need to

further extend the work, and to generate a more thorough conceptualization for the field.

In other words, proposed frameworks and conceptualizations need to be rigorously

tested in empirical studies. Ideally, a mix of applied business settings would provide

more empirical support and depth as to the nature of the SE construct, as well as the

different forms it may take in different industries or with different firm sizes (as well as

differences between public and private enterprise contexts). Lastly, strategic

entrepreneurship is posited to lead to wealth or value creation (Ireland, et al., 2001; Hit,

et al., 2001, Ireland, et al., 2003; Ireland and Webb, 2007; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010;

Hitt, et al., 2011). While Luke, et al. (2011)’s findings support the notion that SE is a

viable pathway for value creation through increased financial returns, further research

needs to be done to provide more and stronger evidence that effective SE indeed leads

to increased value creation in firms. Overall, the SE construct rests on a number of

assumptions that have yet to be tested (Schindehutte and Morris, 2009). In essence,

theoretical conceptualizations for SE need to be verified empirically before the field can

advance any further.

Furthermore, a valid and reliable measure for strategic entrepreneurship has not yet

been developed, although EO, for example, ahs been used as a proxy for some

components of SE in a few studies (i.e. Monsen and Boss, 2009; Shirokova, et al.,

2013). However, operationalizing SE as an accepted measure is absolutely essential to

allow for the field to progress. In fact, the most major gap noted above (i.e. lack of a

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comprehensive empirical foundation for the field) can only be fully solved once a

commonly-accepted reliable and valid measure of SE has been developed. As noted in

the “Measures” section, Foss and Lyngsie (2011) suggest that scales for

entrepreneurial constructs (i.e. measures for EO) are not a very good proxy for strategic

entrepreneurship as they do not fully capture the nature of the construct. However, as

there is no accepted measure, this method seems to be dominant in the few empirical

studies that measure SE as part of the study. Other than the couple mentioned above

that use EO as proxy, Kyrgidou and Petridou (2011), for example, adapted a scale from

Brown, et al. (2001) that measures Stevenson and Jarillo’s (1990) entrepreneurial

management. Nevertheless, a valid and reliable measure for SE is a necessary next

step that will help advance the field greatly and assist in building a rich empirical

foundation for the construct.

One should also note that since the focus of SE is on superior performance, short-term

measures have been used for these studies. If a firm being both strategic and

entrepreneurial is a source of survival, the long-term sustainability of firm using SE is

the real time frame that should be studied. In other words, if SE leads to long-term

wealth or value creation, future research should reflect this. Therefore, short-term

performance may not necessarily be the right dependent variable for SE studies. To

validate the claims made by the construct, future research needs to use dependent

variables that are longer term in scope.

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Additionally, further work on strategic entrepreneurship in an SME context could provide

for some very interesting research and research questions. Research thus far is mainly

focused on larger organizations, although Ireland, et al. (2003) briefly mention how

resource constraints in smaller organizations would change the SE process quite

dramatically. The initial stages of venture creation and launch are characterized by

entrepreneurs having to do more with less and use what abilities and resources they

have at their disposal with a minimum of capital and a maximum of ingenuity and

improvisation (Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). Therefore, new ventures and SMEs

experience much more drastic resource constraints, unlike those as larger, more

established firms. These resource constraints present a different challenge for SMEs

than larger firms that wish to engage in effective SE (Ireland, et al., 2003; Ketchen, et

al., 2007; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010). Therefore, some further studies on SE in SMEs

and new ventures is needed in the field, considering the unique constraints on these

sorts of firms. Additionally, as SE is posited to apply to all firms of differing sizes and

ages (Hitt, et al., 2011), further studies on smaller firms (and different kinds of firms, in

general) are needed to fill the theoretical and empirical gap and support that notion.

These sorts of studies would also help empirically differentiate SE from corporate

entrepreneurship, as the latter is wholly focused on large, established firms. Lastly,

SME and new venture research could help determine the key differences between SE

in large firms and small firms. For example, some components of SE in different

theoretical conceptualizations may be more important or empirically-supported in large

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firms rather than small firms, and vice versa. Even research on the transition from

exploration to exploitation in a small firm context could be valuable.

Future research should also seek to clearly specify the characteristics of such an

organizational structure that allows firms to be capable of supporting the twin needs of

exploration and exploitation (Hitt, et al., 2011). Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010), for

example, suggest that an ambidextrous organizational structure would allow a firm to

balance both exploration and exploitation behaviors; however, further research has yet

to be done on the ideal organizational structure (and for different organization types,

such as SMEs, new ventures, or larger organizations) for SE to be as effective as

possible. Hitt, et al. (2011) also suggest that the type of organizational structure

required likely needs to have the attributes of an ambidextrous organization.

Ambidextrous structures would allow firms to simultaneously explore and exploit (the

key component of effective SE). The most effective balance between exploring and

exploiting may be partially dependent on the type of competitive environment in which

the firm exists, so future research should also examine the extent to which the

competitive environment moderates the relationship between the balance of exploitation

and exploration and a firm’s ability to create long-term value (Hitt, et al., 2011).

Additional research on the nature of the balance between exploration and exploitation

activities could also advance the field. While Ireland and Webb (2009) provided good

insight on what it takes to transition from the two activities and other scholars have

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provided some smaller but similar insights, further explanation and some empirical

support would be beneficial. While scholars have noted that different industries and firm

characteristics warrant different balances between the two activities (Ketchen, et al.,

2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009; Hitt, et al., 2011), little has been done on examples of

balances in different industries, or even how a firm can determine the correct balance

for itself. Case studies for this sort of research can help shed some additional light on

what successful SE looks like, what it entails, and other challenges of SE not yet

explored in the literature.

Scholars posit that SE is relevant across the full life cycle of organizations (Hitt, et al.,

2011), although historically, strategic management has largely been associated with

mature organizations and entrepreneurship largely associated with young ventures. As

such, SE implies a long-term view of value creation that results from simultaneously

engaging in opportunity- and advantage-seeking behaviors. Because of this, Hitt, et al.

(2011) have proposed a few research questions:

1. There is a need to conduct longitudinal research of new ventures as they mature

to understand how the nature of entrepreneurial activities varies over time. How

do organizations learn to manage resources in ways that appropriately and

simultaneously serve their need to exploit today’s advantages and explore for

new opportunities to exploit?

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2. Supporting this type of work is research to precisely detail and classify

advantage-seeking behaviors and opportunity-seeking behaviors used in

organizations.

3. To what degree do these behaviors overlap and to what extent are they

complementary?

4. What methods should firms use to master both types of behaviors?

5. Is it possible for individual business units and departments to excel at both

advantage- and opportunity-seeking behaviors within a single organization?

6. In addition, what actions are required for new ventures to gain and especially

sustain a competitive advantage?

Ireland, et al. (2003) posed two questions at the end of their seminal article that could

provide for promising research directions to advance the field; these two questions are:

1. How do entrepreneurial leaders within firms manage resources strategically to

create competitive advantage?

2. How are the firm’s resource bundles (i.e., capabilities) leveraged in the

identification and exploitation of new market opportunities?

Neither of these topics seem to have been addressed as of yet as per the literature

review included herein.

Schindehutte and Morris (2009) also suggest five promising research areas or topics

within SE that would help advance the field; these areas are:

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1. The antagonistic nature of exploration and exploitation

2. The ambiguous nature of entrepreneurship and its opportunities

3. The transformative nature of innovation

4. The multifaceted nature of multilevel dynamics

5. The process nature of change

Schindehutte and Morris (2009) also identify five areas wherein more development

might enhance the current model of strategic entrepreneurship (SE):

1. Exploration–exploitation,

2. Opportunity,

3. Newness,

4. Micro– macro interaction,

5. Dynamics.

Klein, et al. (2013) also suggest that public organizations are relatively understudied in

the strategic entrepreneurship literature (as evidenced by the literature review).

Strategic entrepreneurship literature has given little attention to the boundaries, internal

organization, growth, and performance of public organizations. Therefore, further

development in the application of strategic entrepreneurship to public organizations

may be a promising research direction that could help add some depth to the field.

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Furthermore, Lumpkin, et al. (2011) suggest that although considerable progress has

been made in research on family businesses, major research avenues remain to be

explored on the interface between strategic entrepreneurship and family business.

Further research on familiness within firms and as a resource for family-owned firms

(Kansikas, et al., 2012) could also prove to be fruitful. Further research to quantify the

findings of this study is needed. Statistical analyses of the influence of familiness on

entrepreneurial leadership and the factors which moderate this relationship would

increase our understanding of the characteristics of family firms. Studies collecting

rigorous statistical data on family firms and entrepreneurial leadership could increase

knowledge on a relatively under-researched topic.

Interestingly enough, Kraus et al. (2011) suggest that SE can be an instrument in

transforming administration-oriented employees into intrapreneurs who exercise

entrepreneurial behavior within their respective organizations (Hitt et al., 2002).

Perhaps further research on the intersections between intrapreneurship and SE could

provide some insight on SE from an individual level of analysis.

Additionally, one paper reviewed (Short, et al., 2013) applied strategic entrepreneurship

concepts to social entrepreneurship. As previously mentioned, the preferred term “value

creation” in the context of SE (see definitional analysis in previous section) is more of

an umbrella term that does not only imply improved financial firm performance, but

could also mean other types of value can be created through strategic entrepreneurship

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(social or otherwise). The outputs in Hitt, et al. (2011)’s multi-level conceptualization

highlights that the benefits of SE can occur on more than one level, supporting this

notion. Therefore, an extremely valuable research stream for the field would be studying

all the value (other than financial) that is created by SE, an how SE can increase social

value and other non-financial value, as well as the key differences in the type of

balance between exploring and exploiting needed to create non-financial value.

Furthermore, research within the context of nonprofits/not-for-profits (organizations

where profit performance is not an indicator of success at all) could also prove to be

fascinating as well as insightful. Again, many scholars in the field posit that SE can

apply to all kinds of firms; therefore, this notion needs to be put to the test in future

studies so it is empirically-supported. Additionally, Hitt, et al. (2011)’s multilevel

framework provides support for the notion that SE can create non-financial value at

levels of analysis other than the firm (i.e. societal). Not-for-profits would be one type of

organization that when studied, could provide empirical support for this notion, as well

as advance the field in otherwise (such as further contributing to the understanding of

how SE can assist in non-financial value creation in a limited resource context where

financial performance is not a priority or primary indicator of success).

A related research direction would be work focusing on societal-level effects of strategic

entrepreneurship and the creation of value for society at large. Further, societal-level

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effects could be studied in bottom-of-the-market (BOP) markets in developing

economies.

Additionally, none of the extant literature focuses on strategic entrepreneurship for firms

that operate in heavily regulated industries, such as energy and oil and gas industries.

These industries pose unique business problems for firms in the form of severe

regulatory constraints and exploring strategic entrepreneurship in these contexts could

be fruitful and help advance the field by proving the applicability of the SE construct in

yet a different context.

SE emphasizes innovation as a vehicle for competitive advantage and effectively

managing that innovation as a means of sustaining value creation and organizational

success (Ireland, et al., 2003; Ketchen, et al., 2007; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010;

Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ireland and Webb, 2009; HItt, et al., 2011). In high technology

industries that have new emerging technologies and markets all the time (and are

characterized by highly dynamic and uncertain environments), SE is highly relevant.

Therefore, further empirical work in these environments could provide some additional

insight on the nature of strategic entrepreneurship. These studies could also prove to be

highly prescriptive in terms of the specific exploring or exploiting actions firms can take

to stay competitive.

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Lastly (and perhaps, most importantly), although Luke, et al. (2011)’s findings

somewhat support the notion that strategic entrepreneurship is associated with value

creation (in this case, financial value), their findings are neither exclusive or conclusive.

More empirical support for the notion that strategic entrepreneurship drives value or

wealth creation (through studies similar to Zahra (1991) and Zahra and Covin (1995) for

corporate entrepreneurship) is needed so that the field may continue to make the claim

that SE drives value creation. Right now, this claim is mainly supported through theory,

greatly weakening the impact of the research within the field.

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DISCUSSION AND IMPLICATIONS

As Hitt, et al. (2011) so aptly put it, “the need to understand how new ventures can

achieve and sustain success by exploiting one or more competitive advantages and

how large established firms can become more entrepreneurial provides incentives to

theoretically explain and empirically explore the SE construct.” Ireland, et al. (2003) also

noted that the implications of the SE construct are important for scholars and managers

alike for a better understanding of how firms identify and exploit entrepreneurial

opportunities, establish and sustain competitive advantages and create wealth.

Implications for Scholars

Strategic entrepreneurship is a dynamic new field with many research opportunities, as

previously listed. With the establishment of the Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal

(SEJ) in 2007, it is becoming clear that SE (both as a field and a construct) has become

increasingly important in management studies (and particularly for those in the fields of

entrepreneurship or strategic management). Consequently, the strategic

entrepreneurship field should not be ignored – not by entrepreneurship scholars, nor by

strategic management scholars.

The work contained herein identifies the five critical dimensions of strategic

entrepreneurship as a consensual definition for strategic entrepreneurship that

represents the convergence of extant literature through a comprehensive content

analysis. The creation of a consensual definition is very important, as not only does

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such a definition solidify the boundaries of strategic entrepreneurship, but the greatest

benefit of having this definition is that it allows strategic entrepreneurship scholars to

frame the debate about what they want the field to become, or how they want it to

change (as suggested by Nag, et al., 2007 in the case of strategic management). This

benefit is extremely important for this new field, as there it’ll allow for the debate over

“what is strategic entrepreneurship” to progress to a debate over “what are the

boundaries of strategic entrepreneurship.” While boundaries have been noted here, as

previously mentioned, the ten key topic areas highlighted by Schendel and Hitt (2007)

and accepted by the SEJ are quite general in scope. Therefore, these five critical

dimensions can progress the conversation among scholars (and perhaps the journal,

itself) to hammer down much more specific topic boundaries, steering future research in

the right direction.

Furthermore, the analysis of the many conceptual frameworks for strategic

entrepreneurship that have emerged can provide the basis for the convergence of these

frameworks into a single conceptual framework for the construct. As Shane and

Venkataraman (2000) have noted, for a field of social science to be useful, it must have

a corresponding conceptual framework that explains and predicts a set of empirical

phenomena not explained or predicted by conceptual frameworks already in existence

in other fields. But the analysis included herein has highlighted that research on

different frameworks is highly fragmented, with each scholar taking a different

approach. The only exception is the emergence of two multilevel frameworks (Hitt, et

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al., 2011; Lumpkin, et al., 2011) that reflects the increasing popularity of multilevel

frameworks within management studies (Hitt, et al., 2007). Therefore, perhaps future

work on the convergence of these frameworks should take a multilevel approach,

seeing as such an approach would address strategic entrepreneurship in a much

broader context (enabling future research at different levels of analysis other than the

firm).

The work contained herein has also successfully confirmed where strategic

entrepreneurship “fits” in relation to strategy and entrepreneurship – right at the

intersection, representing a connection between the two fields – as well as

differentiating SE from other seemingly similar constructs (such as corporate

entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial orientation). This settles the debate (see Meyer,

2009) over whether strategic entrepreneurship is a redundant construct (Van Rensburg,

2013) or almost the same as corporate entrepreneurship. Therefore, scholars should

now be able to refer to each construct appropriately, as well as recognize that strategic

entrepreneurship has unique elements to it and should not be used as a synonym for

constructs such as corporate entrepreneurship or corporate venturing.

Therefore, the implications for strategic entrepreneurship scholars are clear: while

strategic entrepreneurship has been established a unique field and a unique construct

(as supported by this analysis), a strong empirical foundation needs to be established

before the entire field can continue to advance. In essence, a robust framework for

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strategic entrepreneurship needs to be tested in a variety of practical settings to

validate many to the claims made by the extant literature as to the nature of strategic

entrepreneurship. Claims that have yet to be empirically validated include the types of

organizations to which the construct applies (i.e. all organizations) and the outcomes of

strategic entrepreneurship (i.e. value creation). This can only be made possible with an

accepted measure of strategic entrepreneurship. The five dimensions identified in this

thesis serve as five measurable variables that researchers could use as a basis for

reaching an accepted measure – especially since these dimensions are an exhaustive

description of the construct. For example, the dimension of innovation is a measurable

construct that has some accepted proxies, such as the number of patents filed.

Other implications of this work exist for entrepreneurship and strategic management

scholars. For one, it is clear that strategic entrepreneurship is not a field that should be

ignored; in fact, the creation of this unique field is an answer to the call by many

scholars for integration of entrepreneurial and strategic knowledge (i.e. Meyer and

Heppard, 2000).

For example, strategic management scholars focus on studying the major intended and

emergent initiatives taken by general managers on behalf of owners, involving

utilization of resources, to enhance the performance of firms in their external

environments (Nag, et al., 2007). The intent of strategic management, therefore, is to

develop and successfully exploit competitive advantages. Strategic entrepreneurship

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takes this concept and further suggests that enhanced performance can result from the

balance between the advantage-seeking behaviors of strategy with the opportunity-

seeking behaviors of entrepreneurship. The concept of a firm also using opportunity-

seeking behaviors answers questions in strategic management about how a firm can

maintain a competitive advantage for superior performance. In essence, strategic

entrepreneurship can provide a different angle for scholars to explore in terms of how

firms can maintain or create competitive advantages and increase performance by

allowing scholars to apply concepts about entrepreneurial newness, innovation, and

opportunity-recognition to the concept of the creation and enactment of competitive

advantages.

In contrast, entrepreneurship scholars often focus on the discovery and the exploitation

of entrepreneurial opportunities – strategic entrepreneurship provides a strategy

perspective on how these opportunities can be harnessed into an effective competitive

advantage. In other words, entrepreneurship is concerned with recognizing

opportunities that, when effectively exploited, lead to value creation (Hitt, et al., 2011).

Consequently, SE gives scholars a construct that allows entrepreneurship scholars to

explore how these opportunities can be exploited (purview of strategy) – not just how

opportunities are identified. Additionally, strategic entrepreneurship also provides an

avenue for entrepreneurship scholars to shift their focus away from the individual (i.e.

entrepreneur) level of analysis to the firm level of analysis. While corporate

entrepreneurship may provide a similar avenue, the SE field allows researchers to

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explore a broader set of entrepreneurial initiatives, as well as applying these concepts

to a larger set of organizational types (i.e. large or small, new or incumbent, private or

public).

The strategic entrepreneurship field, in essence, seeks to combine both stages of the

value creation process (opportunity identification from entrepreneurship and the

exploitation of opportunity from strategy) into one cohesive story, thus widening the

boundaries for scholars in both disciplines. Since opportunity-identification leads to

opportunity-exploitation, the SE field allows scholars to widen their nets in their research

for a better understanding of how firms create wealth and at all stages of that process.

Implications for Managers

The SE construct is centered on long-term superior firm performance and wealth (or

value) creation. Managers are charged to provide maximum profits and returns for their

shareholders through increased firm performance. Therefore, strategic

entrepreneurship has practical implications for managers, in that it can be a tool with

which managers can help firms achieve long-term value creation or increase firm

performance. In fact, many scholars posit that firm’s long-term success depends on

effective strategic entrepreneurship, where a firm is able to simultaneously exploiting

current domains while exploring for new domains by striking the right balance between

strategic and entrepreneurial behaviors (Ireland and Webb, 2007; Ketchen, et al., 2007;

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Ireland and Webb, 2009; Kyrgidou and Hughes, 2010; Webb, et al., 2010; Hitt, et al.,

2011).

Although the jury is still out on whether SE indeed leads to increased value creation in a

practical setting (as opposed to other tools such as corporate entrepreneurship, or even

just strategic management by itself) as not much empirical data exists validating this

claim, if new empirical data emerges supporting the link between SE and value

creation, managers will need to be trained on how to implement effective SE within their

organizations.

Of course, effective strategic entrepreneurship is no easy task. As the “Challenges of

Strategic Entrepreneurship” section demonstrates, striking the right balance between

opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking behaviors is no simple feat. The search for

the correct balance is complicated by the fact that no single balance “formula” exists

that will work for every type of organization in every industry. Indeed, the ideal balance

depends on the external environment in which a firm operates, as well as the internal

characteristics of the firm. Therefore, flexibility in the organization and organizational

structure (as recommended by Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) and empirically supported

by Luke and Verreynne (2006)), is absolutely crucial for allowing a firm to find the right

balance. If managers understand the importance of flexibility when trying to find the

right balance of exploration and exploitation activities and for implementing effective SE

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in general, then a firm may have a higher chance of being strategically entrepreneurial

(and in theory, enjoy higher returns for shareholders).

This research has other implications for managers. For example, the potential of

strategic entrepreneurship to be used for value creation (i.e. value other than financial

value) means that managers of social ventures could apply the same SE concepts for

maximum value creation. In essence, strategic entrepreneurship may be an effective

tool to maximize returns for stakeholders (not just shareholders) – financial or

otherwise.

Short Example: Apple Incorporated

To provide some context to managers on the potential of strategic entrepreneurship, the

following is a practical example of a well-known firm, Apple Incorporated, which

currently exhibits (and has exhibited in the past) the five dimensions of strategic

entrepreneurship as defined herein. This example will walk through some of Apple’s

history and serves to demonstrate what SE might look like in real life and how it could

lead to sustained value creation over time. It is important that high technology firms like

Apple operate in highly dynamic and uncertain competitive environments - this

example demonstrates how SE behaviors has helped Apple achieve sustained long-

term performance gains.

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Apple has enjoyed unsurpassed amounts of success since the launch of the iPod and

iTunes in 2001, which are credited with the popularization of digital music storage and

accelerating shifts within the music industry in terms of distribution. Since then, the

Apple brand has been synonymous with innovation and clean, minimalist, and

aesthetically pleasing product design (courtesy of design genius Jonathan Ive). Apple

did not stop at the iPod – they subsequently released products such as the iPad tablet

computer, the iPhone smartphone, new and improved versions of their MacBook

laptops and iMac desktop computers, and more recently, the brand-new Apple Watch

smartwatch.

Apple has notably passed up on a blue-ocean strategy (see Kim and Mauborgne, 2005)

in many product markets in favor of a creating a second-mover advantage – a strategy

that has gained the company a cult following and made Apple a household name. The

firm continuously (fourth dimension) engages in both opportunity-seeking and

advantage-seeking activities (first dimension). For example, Apple continuously

leverages their brand (i.e. their competitive advantage) to enter new product markets

(opportunity-seeking), successfully wresting power away from previous market giants

(advantage-seeking) such as Blackberry (in the case of the iPhone) and Sony (in the

case of the iPod and portable media players) by converting customers over to the Apple

line of products.

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Apple has even created market demand for products that customers did not even know

they wanted (a type of opportunity-exploration activity – opportunity development; see

Archdichvili, et al., 2003), like in the case of iPad and the creation of the tablet computer

market, leaving competitors such as Microsoft and Samsung scrambling.

Apple continuously puts innovation (the fifth dimension) at the forefront of all their new

product initiatives, allowing them to fully exploit current markets with newer versions of

the same products (iPhones 1 through 6, for example) and exploring for new markets

with different product versions (for example, the release of the iPad mini). Overall,

Apple has been systematically exploiting current markets by releasing updated versions

of the same product (and still selling older versions for interested customers; e.g.

iPhones) while exploring for new markets by introducing product versions that aim at

different customer bases, as well as brand new product lines in completely different

product markets. In essence, while Apple has enjoyed a single sustained competitive

advantage (namely, it’s brand), it has not been putting all its eggs in one basket in

terms of product offering, and continuously updates its product lines. Therefore, Apple

has enjoyed competitive success in multiple markets by always searching and

exploiting new opportunities for value creation.

Ultimately, Apple has been able to create many short-term successes in different

markets over time that have led to an overall long-term success pattern (the third

dimension) for over a decade, ultimately resulting in superior performance and

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sustained value creation (the second dimension). The firm has essentially succeeded in

balancing both exploration and exploitation behaviors to successfully navigate the

highly competitive and fickle competitive landscape in which they operate.

Concluding Thoughts

As a final note, with an increasingly global economy and many firms (especially high

technology firms) competing in extremely dynamic environments, research on novel

ways to maintain a competitive advantage in the marketplace is extremely important.

The importance of innovation in the global economy, the significance of entrepreneurial

activity for economic growth, and the critical value of strategic management for firm

survival increase SE’s importance (Hitt, et al., 2011). Strategic entrepreneurship

research teaches us that the best way to maintain a competitive advantage is for firms

to gain and enact a succession of competitive advantages. Firms can do this by

maintaining an effective balance between entrepreneurial opportunity-seeking activities

and strategic advantage-seeking activities. Even though future research on different

optimal balances between the two sets of behaviors is needed, the concept of

maintaining such a balance is still relevant and important for today’s managers.

Managers are responsible for implementing these activities with the ultimate goal being

successfully exploiting a current competitive advantage while also looking for potential

future opportunities for new competitive advantages for when changes in the

competitive environment occur. Continuous innovation, encouraged and administered

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by managers in different functional areas, can be the key to achieving a successful

balance.

Ultimately, strategic entrepreneurship literature draws upon an array of knowledge

stocks and perspectives from multiple disciplines (most notably, entrepreneurship and

strategy) to create a more comprehensive, complete, and accurate picture of how firms

create value. Since managers are responsible for maximizing value for their

shareholders and stakeholders, strategic entrepreneurship is a very timely and relevant

field that promises important future contributions.

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Steffens, P., Davidsson, P., & Fitzsimmons, J. (2009). Performance Configurations

Over Time: Implications for Growth‐and Profit‐Oriented Strategies.

Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 33(1), 125-148.

Stevenson, H. H. (1983). A perspective on entrepreneurship (Vol. 13). Harvard

Business School.

Stevenson, H. H., & Jarillo, J. C. (1990). A paradigm of entrepreneurship:

entrepreneurial management. Strategic management journal, 11(5), 17-27.

Tang, Y. C., & Liou, F. M. (2010). Does firm performance reveal its own causes? The

role of Bayesian inference. Strategic Management Journal, 31(1), 39-57.

Tushman, M. L., & O'Reilly III, C. A. (1996). Managing Evolutionary and Revolutionary

Change. California Management Review, 38(4).

Van Rensburg, D. J. (2013). Is Strategic Entrepreneurship a Pleonasm?. Journal of

Management & Strategy, 4(1).

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Webb, J. W., Ketchen Jr, D. J., & Ireland, R. D. (2010). Strategic entrepreneurship

within family-controlled firms: Opportunities and challenges. Journal of Family

Business Strategy, 1(2), 67-77.

Wiggins, R.R, & Ruefli, T.W. 2002. Sustained competitive advantage: Temporal

dynamics and the incidence and persistence of superior economic performance.

Organization Science 13(1): 81-105.

Wright, M., Clarysse, B., & Mosey, S. (2012). Strategic entrepreneurship, resource

orchestration and growing spin-offs from universities. Technology Analysis &

Strategic Management, 24(9), 911-927.

Wright, M., Amess, K., Weir, C., & Girma, S. (2009). Private equity and corporate

governance: Retrospect and prospect. Corporate Governance: An International

Review, 17(3), 353-375.

Yan, H. D., & Hu, M. C. (2008). Strategic entrepreneurship and the growth of the firm:

the case of Taiwan's bicycle industry. Global Business and Economics Review,

10(1), 11-34.

Zahra, S. A. (1991). Predictors and financial outcomes of corporate entrepreneurship:

An exploratory study. Journal of business venturing, 6(4), 259-285.

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Zahra, S. A. (1993). A conceptual model of entrepreneurship as firm behavior: a critique

and extension. Entrepreneurship theory and practice, 17, 5-5.

Zahra, S. A., & Covin, J. G. (1995). Contextual influences on the corporate

entrepreneurship-performance relationship: A longitudinal analysis. Journal of

business venturing, 10(1), 43-58

Žvirblis, A., & Buračas, A. (2011). Examination of the Entrepreneurship Advantage

Determinants Affecting Strategic Decisions. Organizacijų Vadyba: Sisteminiai

Tyrimai, (58), 31-42

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APPENDIX A: LIST OF STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP ARTICLES FROM

LITERATURE SEARCH PUBLISHED FROM 2001 TO 2014

Agarwal, R., Audretsch, D., & Sarkar, M. B. (2007). The process of creative

construction: knowledge spillovers, entrepreneurship, and economic growth.

Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 1(3‐4), 263-286.

Agarwal, R, Audretsch, D., & Sarkar, M. (2010). Knowledge spillovers and strategic

entrepreneurship. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 4(4), 271-283.

Audretsch, D. B., Lehmann, E. E., & Plummer, L. A. (2009). Agency and governance in

strategic entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 33(1), 149-

166.

Bjørnskov, C., & Foss, N. (2013). How strategic entrepreneurship and the institutional

context drive economic growth. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 7(1), 50-69.

Boone, C., Wezel, F. C., & van Witteloostuijn, A. (2013). Joining the pack or going solo?

A dynamic theory of new firm positioning. Journal of Business Venturing, 28(4),

511-527.

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Burgelman, R. A., & Grove, A. S. (2007). Cross‐boundary disruptors: powerful

interindustry entrepreneurial change agents. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal,

1(3‐4), 315-327.

Cariola, M., & Rolfo, S. (2004). Evolution in the rationales of foresight in Europe.

Futures, 36(10), 1063-1075.

Cunha, M. P. (2007). Entrepreneurship as decision making: rational, intuitive and

improvisational approaches. Journal of Enterprising Culture, 15(01), 1-20.

Dew, N., Sarasathy, S., Read, S., & Wiltbank, R. (2009). Affordable loss: Behavioral

economic aspects of the plunge decision. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal,

3(2), 105-126.

Dushnitsky, G., & Lavie, D. (2010). How alliance formation shapes corporate venture

capital investment in the software industry: a resource‐based perspective.

Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 4(1), 22-48.

Hitt, M. A., Ireland, R. D., Camp, S. M., & Sexton, D. L. (2001). Strategic

entrepreneurship: entrepreneurial strategies for wealth creation. Strategic

management journal, 22(6‐7), 479-491.

Hitt, M. A., Ireland, R. D., Sirmon, D. G., & Trahms, C. A. (2011). Strategic

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entrepreneurship: creating value for individuals, organizations, and society. The

Academy of Management Perspectives, 25(2), 57-75.

Ireland, R. D., Hitt, M. A., & Sirmon, D. G. (2003). A model of strategic entrepreneurship:

The construct and its dimensions. Journal of management, 29(6), 963-989.

Ireland, R.D., & Webb, J. W. (2007). Strategic entrepreneurship: Creating competitive

advantage through streams of innovation. Business Horizons, 50(1), 49-59.

Ireland, R. D., & Webb, J. W. (2009). Crossing the great divide of strategic

entrepreneurship: Transitioning between exploration and exploitation. Business

Horizons, 52(5), 469-479.

Kansikas, J., Laakkonen, A., Sarpo, V., & Kontinen, T. (2012). Entrepreneurial

leadership and familiness as resources for strategic entrepreneurship.

International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour & Research, 18(2), 141-158.

Ketchen, D. J. (2007), Change. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 1: 291–293.

doi: 10.1002/sej.23

Ketchen, D. J., Ireland, R. D., & Snow, C. C. (2007). Strategic entrepreneurship,

collaborative innovation, and wealth creation. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal,

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1(3‐4), 371-385.

Klein, P. G., Mahoney, J. T., McGahan, A. M., & Pitelis, C. N. (2013). Capabilities and

strategic entrepreneurship in public organizations. Strategic Entrepreneurship

Journal, 7(1), 70-91.

Kotha, S. (2010). Spillovers, spill‐ins, and strategic entrepreneurship: America's first

commercial jet airplane and Boeing's ascendancy in commercial aviation.

Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 4(4), 284-306.

Kuratko, D. F., & Audretsch, D. B. (2009). Strategic entrepreneurship: exploring different

perspectives of an emerging concept. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice,

33(1), 1-17.

Kyrgidou, L. P., & Hughes, M. (2010). Strategic entrepreneurship: origins, core elements

and research directions. European Business Review, 22(1), 43-63.

Kyrgidou, L. P., & Petridou, E. (2011). The effect of competence exploration and

competence exploitation on strategic entrepreneurship. Technology Analysis &

Strategic Management, 23(6), 697-713.

Levie, J., & Autio, E. (2011). Regulatory burden, rule of law, and entry of strategic

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entrepreneurs: An international panel study. Journal of Management Studies,

48(6), 1392-1419.

Liu, X., Wright, M., Filatotchev, I., Dai, O., & Lu, J. (2010). Human mobility and

international knowledge spillovers: evidence from high‐tech small and medium

enterprises in an emerging market. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 4(4),

340-355.

Luke, B., Kearins, K., & Verreynne, M. L. (2011). Developing a conceptual framework of

strategic entrepreneurship. International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour &

Research, 17(3), 314-337.

Luke, B., & Verreynne, M. L. (2006). Exploring strategic entrepreneurship in the public

sector. Qualitative Research in Accounting & Management, 3(1), 4-26.

Lumpkin, G. T., Steier, L., & Wright, M. (2011). Strategic entrepreneurship in family

business. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 5(4), 285-306.

Mathews, J. A. (2010). Lachmannian insights into strategic entrepreneurship:

Resources, activities and routines in a disequilibrium world. Organization Studies,

31(2), 219-244.

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Meuleman, M., Amess, K., Wright, M., & Scholes, L. (2009). Agency, Strategic

Entrepreneurship, and the Performance of Private Equity‐Backed Buyouts.

Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 33(1), 213-239.

Monsen, E., & Wayne Boss, R. (2009). The impact of strategic entrepreneurship inside

the organization: Examining job stress and employee retention. Entrepreneurship

Theory and Practice, 33(1), 71-104.

Obeng, B. A., Robson, P., & Haugh, H. (2012). Strategic entrepreneurship and small

firm growth in Ghana. International Small Business Journal.

Patzelt, H., & Shepherd, D. A. (2009). Strategic entrepreneurship at universities:

academic entrepreneurs' assessment of policy programs. Entrepreneurship

Theory and practice, 33(1), 319-340.

Pisano, V., Ireland, R. D., Hitt, M. A., & Webb, J. W. (2007). International

entrepreneurship in emerging economies: the role of social capital, knowledge

development and entrepreneurial actions. International Journal of Technology

Management, 38(1), 11-28.

Rosenkopf, L., & Schilling, M. A. (2007). Comparing alliance network structure across

industries: observations and explanations. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal,

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1(3‐4), 191-209.

Schindehutte, M., & Morris, M. H. (2009). Advancing strategic entrepreneurship

research: the role of complexity science in shifting the paradigm.

Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 33(1), 241-276.

Schulze, W. (2007). Networks and strategic entrepreneurship: comments on comparing

alliance network structure across industries: observations and explanations and

strategic networks and entrepreneurial ventures. Strategic Entrepreneurship

Journal, 1(3‐4), 229-231.

Shirokova, G., Vega, G., & Sokolova, L. (2013). Performance of Russian SMEs:

exploration, exploitation and strategic entrepreneurship. critical perspectives on

international business, 9(1/2), 173-203.

Short, J. C., Moss, T. W., & Lumpkin, G. T. (2009). Research in social entrepreneurship:

Past contributions and future opportunities. Strategic entrepreneurship journal,

3(2), 161-194.

Siegel, D. S. (2007). Comments on Entrepreneurial pursuits of self and collective

interests and Strategic entrepreneurship, collaborative innovation, and wealth

creation. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 1(3‐4), 387-389.

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Sirén, C. A., Kohtamäki, M., & Kuckertz, A. (2012). Exploration and exploitation

strategies, profit performance, and the mediating role of strategic learning:

Escaping the exploitation trap. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 6(1), 18-41.

Skuras, D., Meccheri, N., Moreira, M. B., Rosell, J., & Stathopoulou, S. (2005).

Entrepreneurial human capital accumulation and the growth of rural businesses:

a four-country survey in mountainous and lagging areas of the European union.

Journal of Rural Studies, 21(1), 67-79.

Steffens, P., Davidsson, P., & Fitzsimmons, J. (2009). Performance Configurations Over

Time: Implications for Growth‐and Profit‐Oriented Strategies. Entrepreneurship

Theory and Practice, 33(1), 125-148.

Webb, J. W., Ketchen Jr, D. J., & Ireland, R. D. (2010). Strategic entrepreneurship

within family-controlled firms: Opportunities and challenges. Journal of Family

Business Strategy, 1(2), 67-77.

Wright, M., Clarysse, B., & Mosey, S. (2012). Strategic entrepreneurship, resource

orchestration and growing spin-offs from universities. Technology Analysis &

Strategic Management, 24(9), 911-927.

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Wright, M., Amess, K., Weir, C., & Girma, S. (2009). Private equity and corporate

governance: Retrospect and prospect. Corporate Governance: An International

Review, 17(3), 353-375.

Yan, H. D., & Hu, M. C. (2008). Strategic entrepreneurship and the growth of the firm:

the case of Taiwan's bicycle industry. Global Business and Economics Review,

10(1), 11-34.

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APPENDIX B: LIST OF DEFINITIONS AND DESCRIPTIONS OF STRATEGIC

ENTREPRENEURSHIP USED IN ACADEMIC PAPERS FROM 2001 TO 2014

The Five Dimensions of Strategic Entrepreneurship Coding Key:

1 – Balance between opportunity-seeking (exploration) and advantage-seeking

(exploitation) behaviors

2 – Value creation

3 – Balancing short-term success with a long-term perspective

4 – The continuous nature of the strategic entrepreneurship process

5 – Innovation

Definitions and Descriptions (in ascending chronological order):

1. Hitt, Ireland, Camp, and Sexton (2001) – Strategic Management Journal

o Strategic entrepreneurship is entrepreneurial action with a strategic

perspective. In short, strategic entrepreneurship is the integration of

entrepreneurial (i.e., opportunity- seeking behavior) and strategic (i.e.,

advantage- seeking) perspectives in developing and taking actions

designed to create wealth.

o CODING: 1,2

2. Hitt, Ireland, Camp, and Sexton (2002) - Strategic Entrepreneurship: Creating a

New Mindset (Blackwell Publishing)

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o Strategic entrepreneurship is the integration of entrepreneurial (i.e.,

opportunity- seeking actions) and strategic (i.e., advantage-seeking

actions) perspectives to design and implement entrepreneurial strategies

that create wealth. Thus, strategic entrepreneurship is entrepreneurial

action that is taken with a strategic perspective.

o Thus, strategic entrepreneurship facilitates firms’ efforts to identify the best

opportunities (matched to their resources and with the highest potential

returns) and then to exploit them with the discipline of a strategic business

plan. The goal of strategic entrepreneurship is to continuously create

competitive advantages that lead to maximum wealth creation.

o CODING: 1, 2, 4

3. Ireland, Hitt, and Sirmon (2003) – Journal of Management

o Strategic entrepreneurship (SE) involves simultaneous opportunity-

seeking and advantage- seeking behaviors and results in superior firm

performance and long-term wealth creation. The four distinctive

dimensions of SE are: an entrepreneurial mind- set, an entrepreneurial

culture and entrepreneurial leadership, the strategic management of

resources and applying creativity and developing innovation.

o CODING: 1, 2, 3, 5

4. Ireland and Webb (2007) – Business Horizons

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o Strategic entrepreneurship is a value-creating intersection between

strategy and entrepreneurship, balancing exploration and exploitation of

opportunity; balancing resources between exploration and exploitation;

and maintaining continuous streams of innovation. Thus, SE is concerned

with actions the firm intends to take to exploit the innovations that result

from its efforts to continuously explore for innovation-based opportunities

(i.e., new organizational forms, new products, new processes, etc.).

o Strategic entrepreneurship (SE) is a term used to capture firms’ efforts to

simultaneously exploit today’s competitive advantages while exploring for

the innovations that will be the foundation for tomorrow’s competitive

advantages.

o In other words, there is a tension is between doing what is necessary to

exploit today’s competitive advantages and exploring today for innovations

that can be the foundation for the firm’s future competitive advantages.

o Strategic entrepreneurship is the means through which firms

simultaneously exploit their current competitive advantages while

exploring for future opportunities.

o CODING: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5

5. Ketchen (2007) – Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal

o Strategic entrepreneurship refers to an approach to pursuing superior

performance through both strategic and entrepreneurial activities.

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Specifically, a firm engaged in strategic entrepreneurship attempts to

concurrently exploit existing competitive advantages (the hallmark of

strategy) and create new opportunities (a core endeavor of

entrepreneurship).

o CODING: 1, 2

6. Ketchen, Ireland, and Snow (2007) – Strategic Management Journal

o Strategic entrepreneurship (SE) refers to firms’ pursuit of “superior

performance” through simultaneous opportunity-seeking and advantage-

seeking activities.

o CODING: 1, 2

7. Ireland and Webb (2009) – Business Horizons

o Strategic entrepreneurship is the exploration for future sources of

competitive advantage, combined with exploitation of current sources of

competitive advantage and has been proposed as a means via which

decision makers can manage uncertainty.

o Strategic entrepreneurship is a term used to capture firms' efforts to

simultaneously exploit today's competitive advantages while exploring for

the innovations that will be the foundation for tomorrow's competitive

advantages. The SE concept, as we are describing it, is somewhat new for

academics and business practitioners; however, the concept is important

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in that effective SE practices result in a firm being able to form a balance

between opportunity-seeking (i.e., exploration) and advantage-seeking

(i.e., exploitation) behaviors.

o SE is a process through which resources are used for both exploration

and exploitation purposes.

o CODING: 1,2, 3, 5

8. Kuratko and Audretsch (2009) – Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice

o Strategic entrepreneurship describes a deliberate and enacted desire of a

firm to seek for and respond to shifts in the external environment and is

the simulation of entrepreneurial activity to achieve strategic goals. It deals

with the identification and exploitation of opportunities while

simultaneously creating and sustaining a competitive advantage. A stated

and committed entrepreneurial strategy enables the employees to direct

their innovation towards a common goal, enabling the release of creative

energy that a firm could use to improve its competitive position. It starts

when the entrepreneur is less concerned with issues linked to short-term

survival and more with those related to long-term success.

o CODING: 1, 3, 5

9. Kyrgidou and Hughes (2010) – European Business Review

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o SE can be defined as a process that facilitates firm efforts to identify

opportunities with the highest potential to lead to value creation, through

the entrepreneurial component and then to exploit them through measured

strategic actions, based on their resource base. The entrepreneurial

aspect contributes to the ability of identifying opportunities and to the

willingness of firms to pursue new opportunities, whilst the strategic

perspective enables them to isolate and exploit those opportunities most

likely to lead to sustainable competitive advantage and subsequent means

by which to form advantage.

o CODING: 1, 2, 3

10. Mathews (2010) – Organization Studies

o Strategic entrepreneurship is the activity that drives the economy in new

directions through the recombination of resources, activities and routines

by firms, and the entrepreneur as the economic agent who in principle

lacks resources (but knows where to find them), who becomes aware of

opportunities that can be turned into profit, and acts to realize these

opportunities through resource mobilization and activation in the pursuit of

profit. The capitalist institution that supports entrepreneurship is credit,

which enables resource-poor entrepreneurs to mobilize business assets

and mount challenges to incumbents. This is an approach to

entrepreneurship that is entirely consistent with Lachmann’s vision of

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subjective expectations and imagination relating to resource combination

and recombination leading to successive capital restructuring at the level

of the economy.

o CODING: 5

11. Webb, Ketchen, and Ireland (2010) – Journal of Family Business Strategy

o A firm engages in strategic entrepreneurship when it simultaneously

pursues exploration for future business domains and exploitation of

current domains.

o Strategic entrepreneurship is simultaneously exploring for future business

domains while exploiting current domains in order to consistently produce

superior performance.

o CODING: 1, 2, 3, 4

12. Hitt, Ireland, Sirmon, and Trahms (2011) – The Academy of Management

Journal

o Strategic entrepreneurship allows those leading and managing firms to

simultaneously address the dual challenges of exploiting current

competitive advantages (the purview of strategic management) while

exploring for opportunities (the purview of entrepreneurship) for which

future competitive advantages can be developed and used as the path to

value and wealth creation.

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o SE is concerned with advantage-seeking and opportunity-seeking

behaviors resulting in value for individuals, organizations, and/or society.

SE involves actions taken to exploit current advantages while concurrently

exploring new opportunities that sustain an entity’s ability to create value

across time.

o CODING: 1, 2, 3, 4

13. Kyrgidou and Petridou (2011) – Technology Analysis & Strategic Management

o Strategic entrepreneurship captures firms’ efforts to simultaneously excel

at opportunity seeking and advantage seeking. Successfully achieving the

balance between opportunity-seeking and advantage-seeking behaviors is

effective strategic entrepreneurship.

o CODING: 1

14. Luke, Kearins, and Verreynne (2011) – International Journal of Entrepreneurial

Behavior & Research

o Strategic entrepreneurship is a distinct process, founded on bringing

something new to the market; a combination of innovation, opportunity

identification, and growth.

o Strategic entrepreneurship is entrepreneurial activity which is directly

aligned with and leverages from a business’s core competencies

o Strategic entrepreneurship is a process represented by four key aspects:

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i. entrepreneurial activity;

ii. applied in the strategic context of business;

iii. which develop expertise within their core skills and resources, and;

iv. leverage from that by transferring and applying their knowledge of

those skills and resources to new products, services, or markets.

o The nature of strategic entrepreneurship may take various forms, ranging

from incremental to radical innovations, with deliberate to emergent

approaches. Strategic entrepreneurship offers the potential for financial

benefit, subject to managing changes in both internal and external forces

(e.g. the external environment).

o CODING: 1, 2, 5

15. Kansikas, Laakkonen, Sarpo, and Kontinen (2012) – International Journal of

Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research

o Strategic entrepreneurship is entrepreneurial (i.e. opportunity-seeking

behavior) and strategic (i.e. advantage-seeking) planning and action

taking designed to create wealth.

o The drivers of strategic entrepreneurship are entrepreneurial leaders who

focus on developing actions that lead to opportunity-driven decision-

making

o CODING: 1, 2